The brief article analyzes the recent debate on reforming the Italian form of government in a monocratic direction by framing it in the context of the continuity between monarchic and republican experience: from the constitution of the Kingdom of Italy, which formally attributed all executive power to the king, to the Fascist diarchy, to the broad powers of "political intermediation" attributed to the President of the Republic by the Constitution of 1948, the ambiguities of the relationship between the head of state and the chief executive and their influence on current and future reform hypotheses are highlighted.

Continuità e ambiguità della forma di governo lungo la storia costituzionale italiana: appunti brevi sull’ipotesi presidenzialista.

luca dell'atti
2023-01-01

Abstract

The brief article analyzes the recent debate on reforming the Italian form of government in a monocratic direction by framing it in the context of the continuity between monarchic and republican experience: from the constitution of the Kingdom of Italy, which formally attributed all executive power to the king, to the Fascist diarchy, to the broad powers of "political intermediation" attributed to the President of the Republic by the Constitution of 1948, the ambiguities of the relationship between the head of state and the chief executive and their influence on current and future reform hypotheses are highlighted.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11586/471740
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