Vertreter Aus Südtirol in Rom Und in Europa 154 Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 Vertreter Aus Südtirol in Rom Und in Europa

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Vertreter Aus Südtirol in Rom Und in Europa 154 Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 Vertreter Aus Südtirol in Rom Und in Europa Vertreter aus Südtirol in Rom und in Europa 154 Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 Vertreter aus Südtirol in Rom und in Europa Parlamentswahlen und Parlamentarier Parlamentswahlen am 18.4.1948 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 107.059 62,70 DC 37.392 21,80 Volksfront 13.218 7,70 Vereinigte Sozialisten 10.262 5,90 Blocco Naz. 3.263 1,90 Insgesamt 171.149 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP 36.378 48,90 SVP 58.852 82,55 DC 21.512 28,92 DC 8.802 12,34 PRI 4.065 5,46 PRI 1.754 2,46 Blocco Naz. 3.553 4,78 Social- Social- comunisti 8.889 11,95 comunisti 1.890 2,65 Abkürzungen: SVP = Südtiroler Volkspartei; DC = Democrazia Cristiana; PRI = Partito Repubblicano Italiano. Kammerabgeordnete der Provinz Bozen 1948-53: Otto von Guggenberg (SVP), Friedl Volgger (SVP), Toni Ebner (SVP), Angelo Facchin (DC); Senatoren: Karl von Braitenberg (SVP), Josef Raffeiner (SVP). Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 155 Parlamentswahlen am 7.6.1953 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 118.394 60,06 DC 34.720 17,61 PSI 11.510 5,84 MSI 9.141 4,64 PCI 8.025 4,07 PSDI 6.286 3,19 PNM 4.764 2,42 U. Soc. Ind. 1.856 0,94 PLI 1.036 0,53 PRI 646 0,33 PPTT 393 0,20 Unitá Popol. 340 0,17 Insgesamt 197.111 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP 40.591 45,53 SVP 66.548 83,78 DC 20.967 23,52 PSI 13.604 15,26 DC 10.420 13,12 MSI 6.100 6,84 PSDI 4.639 5,20 PNM 3.244 3,64 PCI 2.459 3,10 Insgesamt 89.145 100% Insgesamt 79.427 100% Abkürzungen: PSI = Partito Socialista Italiano; PSDI = Partito Socialista Democra- tico Italiano; MSI = Movimento Sociale Italiano; PCI = Partito Comunista Italiano; PLI = Partito Liberale Italiano; PNM = Partito Nazionale Monarchico; Soc. Ind. = Socialisti Indipendenti; PPTT = Partito Popolare Trentino-Tirolese. Für die übrigen Abkürzungen siehe die vorhergehende Seite. Kammerabgeordnete der Provinz Bozen 1953-58: Karl Tinzl (SVP), Toni Ebner (SVP), Otto von Guggenberg (SVP), Angelo Facchin (DC); Senatoren: Karl von Braitenberg (SVP), Josef Raffeiner (SVP). 156 Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 Vertreter aus Südtirol in Rom und in Europa Parlamentswahlen am 25.5.1958 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 130.986 60,80 DC 36.468 16,92 PSI 13.517 6,27 MSI 11.899 5,52 PCI 8.890 4,13 PSDI 7.246 3,36 PLI 2.645 1,23 PNM 1.944 0,90 PMP 884 0,41 PRI 782 0,36 MARP 209 0,10 Insgesamt 215.470 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP 44.625 46,77 SVP 73.112 85,33 DC 20.246 21,22 DC 9.568 11,17 Indipendenti di Sin. 16.037 16,81 MSI 10.902 11,43 PLI 3.597 3,77 PCI 2.999 3,50 Insgesamt 95.407 100% Insgesamt 85.679 100% Abkürzungen: PMP = Partito Monarchico Pop.; MARP = Regionalautonomis- tische Bewegung Oberitaliens. Für die übrigen Abkürzungen siehe die vor- hergehenden Seiten. Kammerabgeordnete der Provinz Bozen 1958-63: Toni Ebner (SVP), Ro- land Riz (SVP), Karl Mitterdorfer (SVP), Alcide Berloffa (DC); Senatoren: Luis Sand (SVP), Karl Tinzl (SVP), Candido Rosati (DC) ab 1962. Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 157 Parlamentswahlen am 28.4.1963 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 132.245 56,60 DC 38.557 16,50 PSI 19.308 8,26 PCI 11.987 5,13 MSI 10.746 4,60 PSDI 10.629 4,55 PLI 6.639 2,84 PDIUM 1.349 0,58 PAPI 922 0,39 PRI 693 0,30 MCI 590 0,25 Insgesamt 215.470 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP 41.474 39,42 SVP 69.075 78,83 DC 21.459 20,40 PSI 13.812 13,13 DC 7.783 8,88 Josef Josef Raffeiner 8.911 8,47 Raffeiner 6.289 7,18 MSI 7.540 7,17 PSDI 7.230 6,87 PSI 2.779 3,17 Battisti 4.773 4,54 MSI 1.695 1,93 Insgesamt 105.199 100% Insgesamt 87.621 100% Abkürzungen: PDIUM = Partito Democratico Italiano di Unità Monarchica; PAPI = Partito Autonomo dei Pensionati d’Italia; MCI = Movimento Combat- tentistico Italiano. Für die übrigen Abkürzungen siehe die vorhergehenden Seiten. Kammerabgeordnete der Provinz Bozen 1963-68: Karl Vaja (SVP), Karl Mitterdorfer (SVP), Hans Dietl (SVP), Alcide Berloffa (DC); Senatoren: Luis Sand (SVP), Hans Saxl (SVP), Candido Rosati (DC). 158 Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 Vertreter aus Südtirol in Rom und in Europa Parlamentswahlen am 19.5.1968 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 139.231 58,49 DC 34.303 14,41 PSU (PSI +PSDI) 20.846 8,76 PCI 12.735 5,35 MSI 9.816 4,12 PLI 8.399 3,53 SFP 5.533 2,32 PSIUP 4.351 1,83 PRI 1.686 0,71 PDIUM 1.135 0,48 Insgesamt 238.035 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP 47.182 41,32 SVP 74.662 81,37 DC 22.854 20,02 DC 7.478 8,15 PSU PSU (PSI + PSDI) 15.390 13,48 (PSI + PSDI) 3.542 3,86 PCI- PSIUP 12.035 10,54 SFP 3.139 3,42 MSI 7.171 6,28 MSI 1.509 1,64 PLI 5.709 5,00 PLI 1.428 1,56 SFP 2.605 2,28 PRI 1.229 1,08 Insgesamt 114.175 100% Insgesamt 91.758 100% Abkürzungen: PSIUP = Partito Socialista di Unità Proletaria; PSU = Partito Socialista Unitario (PSI + PSDI); SFP = Soziale Fortschrittspartei Südtirols. Für die übrigen Abkürzungen siehe die vorhergehenden Seiten. Kammerabgeordnete der Provinz Bozen 1968-72: Karl Mitterdorfer (SVP), Roland Riz (SVP), Hans Dietl (SVP); Senatoren: Peter Brugger (SVP), Friedl Volgger (SVP). Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 159 Parlamentswahlen am 7.5.1972 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 142.076 59,02 DC 39.540 16,43 PCI 13.795 5,73 PSI 12.448 5,17 MSI 10.984 4,56 PSDI 8.554 3,55 PLI 5.168 2,15 PRI 3.522 1,46 PSIUP 2.588 1,80 Manif. 1.220 0,51 MPL 830 0,34 Insgesamt 240.725 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP-PPTT 42.283 34,96 SVP-PPTT 59.743 64,64 DC 29.276 24,21 WdU 19.121 20,69 PCI-PSIUP 11.617 9,61 DC 8.232 8,91 PSI 11.287 9,33 PSI 3.323 3,60 WdU 9.334 7,72 MSI 7.882 6,52 PSDI 6.502 5,38 PRI 2.766 2,29 MSI 1.999 2,16 Insgesamt 120.947 100% Insgesamt 92.418 100% Abkürzungen: WdU = Wahlverband der Unabhängigen (Liste „Tirol”); Manif. = Manifesto; MPL = Movimento Politico dei Lavoratori. Für die übrigen Ab- kürzungen siehe die vorhergehenden Seiten. Kammerabgeordnete der Provinz Bozen 1972-76: Roland Riz (SVP), Karl Mitterdorfer (SVP), Hans Benedikter (SVP), Alcide Berloffa (DC); Senatoren: Peter Brugger (SVP), Karl Zanon (SVP), Candido Rosati (DC). 160 Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 Vertreter aus Südtirol in Rom und in Europa Parlamentswahlen am 20.6.1976 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 162.869 59,61 DC 36.097 13,21 PCI-KPI 26.803 6,81 PSI 15.075 5,51 MSI 7.265 2,66 SPS 6.044 2,21 Dem. Prol. 5.047 1,85 PRI 4.872 1,78 PSDI 4.418 1,62 P. Radicale 2.806 1,03 PLI 1.933 0,71 Insgesamt 273.211 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP 53.197 40,58 SVP-PPTT 83.382 83,58 DC 25.641 19,56 DC 6.292 6,31 PCI-KPI 20.177 15,39 SPS 2.972 2,98 PSI 12.085 9,22 PCI-KPI 2.545 2,55 PLI-PRI-PSDI 7.037 5,36 PSI 2.194 2,20 MSI-DN 5.341 4,07 PLI-PRI-PSDI 1.205 1,21 SPS 2.543 1,94 MSI - DN 1.171 1,17 Insgesamt 126.021 100% Insgesamt 99.761 100% Abkürzungen: SPS = Sozialdemokratische Partei Südtirols; Dem. Prol. = De- mocrazia Proletaria; P. Radicale = Partito Radicale. Für die übrigen Abkürzun- gen siehe die vorhergehenden Seiten. Kammerabgeordnete der Provinz Bozen 1976-79: Roland Riz (SVP), Hugo Gamper (SVP), Hans Benedikter (SVP); Senatoren: Karl Mitterdorfer (SVP), Peter Brugger (SVP). Das Südtirol-Handbuch 2017 161 Parlamentswahlen am 3.6.1979 Kammer: Parteien Stimmen % SVP 174.199 62,91 DC 33.045 11,94 PCI-KPI 23.220 8,38 PSI-SPI 11.945 4,32 PR 10.040 3,69 MSI-DN 7.047 2,55 PSDI 5.041 1,82 PRI 3.864 1,40 NS 3.154 1,14 PLI 2.452 0,88 PDUP 1.804 0,66 DN 1.051 0,38 Insgesamt 238.035 100% Senat: Wahlkreis Bozen Wahlkreis Brixen Parteien Stimmen % Parteien Stimmen % SVP 56.694 44,47 SVP 88.698 87,00 DC 23.384 18,34 DC 5.770 5,66 PCI-KPI 18.844 14,79 PCI-KPI 2.015 1,97 PSI-SPI 8.644 6,78 PSI-SPI 1.559 1,53 PR 5.845 4,58 PR 999 0,97 MSI-DN 5.171 4,06 MSI-DN 988 0,96 PSDI 3.852 3,02 PSDI 851 0,84 PRI-SFP 2.882 2,26 PRI-SFP 576 0,57 PLI 1.675 1,31 PLI 375 0,37 DN 503 0,39 DN 131 0,13 Insgesamt 127.494 100% Insgesamt 101.962 100% Abkürzungen: DN - Democrazia Nazionale; PR = Partito Radicale; DP = De- mocrazia Proletaria; PDUP = Partito di Unità Proletaria.
Recommended publications
  • Abbreviations
    AbbreviAtions ABI Associazione Bancaria Italiana (Italian Banking Association) ALD Autonomie Liberté Démocratie (Autonomy Liberty Democracy) ALDE Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe AN Alleanza Nazionale (National Alliance) ANCI Associazione Nazionale Comuni Italiani (National Association of Italian Municipalities) ANM Associazione Nazionale Magistrati (National Magistrates Association) BdI Banca d’Italia (Bank of Italy) BMPS Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena CD Centro Democratico—Diritti e Libertà (Democratic Center—Rights and Freedom) CGIL Confederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro (Italian General Confederation of Labor) CIR Compagnie Industriali Riunite (an Italian holding company) CISE Centro Italiano Studi Elettorali (Italian Center for Electoral Studies) CISL Confederazione Italiana Sindicati dei Lavoratori (Italian Confederation of Workers’ Trade Unions) CISR Comitato Interministeriale per la Sicurezza della Repubblica (Committee for the Security of the Republic) CLN Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (National Liberation Committee) CN Centrodestra Nazionale (National Center-Right) COPASIR Comitato Parlamentare di Controllo per i Servizi di Informazione e Sicurezza e per il Segreto di Stato Italian Politics: Still Waiting for the Transformation 29 (2014): vii–ix © Berghahn Books doi:10.3167/ip.2014.290101 viii Abbreviations (Parliamentary Committee for the Intelligence and Security Services and for State Secret Control) CSD Consiglio Supremo di Difesa (Supreme Council of Defense) CSM Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura
    [Show full text]
  • The Mainstream Right, the Far Right, and Coalition Formation in Western Europe by Kimberly Ann Twist a Dissertation Submitted In
    The Mainstream Right, the Far Right, and Coalition Formation in Western Europe by Kimberly Ann Twist A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Jonah D. Levy, Chair Professor Jason Wittenberg Professor Jacob Citrin Professor Katerina Linos Spring 2015 The Mainstream Right, the Far Right, and Coalition Formation in Western Europe Copyright 2015 by Kimberly Ann Twist Abstract The Mainstream Right, the Far Right, and Coalition Formation in Western Europe by Kimberly Ann Twist Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science University of California, Berkeley Professor Jonah D. Levy, Chair As long as far-right parties { known chiefly for their vehement opposition to immigration { have competed in contemporary Western Europe, scholars and observers have been concerned about these parties' implications for liberal democracy. Many originally believed that far- right parties would fade away due to a lack of voter support and their isolation by mainstream parties. Since 1994, however, far-right parties have been included in 17 governing coalitions across Western Europe. What explains the switch from exclusion to inclusion in Europe, and what drives mainstream-right parties' decisions to include or exclude the far right from coalitions today? My argument is centered on the cost of far-right exclusion, in terms of both office and policy goals for the mainstream right. I argue, first, that the major mainstream parties of Western Europe initially maintained the exclusion of the far right because it was relatively costless: They could govern and achieve policy goals without the far right.
    [Show full text]
  • Review of European and National Election Results Update: September 2019
    REVIEW OF EUROPEAN AND NATIONAL ELECTION RESULTS UPDATE: SEPTEMBER 2019 A Public Opinion Monitoring Publication REVIEW OF EUROPEAN AND NATIONAL ELECTION RESULTS UPDATE: SEPTEMBER 2019 Directorate-General for Communication Public Opinion Monitoring Unit May 2019 - PE 640.149 IMPRESSUM AUTHORS Philipp SCHULMEISTER, Head of Unit (Editor) Alice CHIESA, Marc FRIEDLI, Dimitra TSOULOU MALAKOUDI, Matthias BÜTTNER Special thanks to EP Liaison Offices and Members’ Administration Unit PRODUCTION Katarzyna ONISZK Manuscript completed in September 2019 Brussels, © European Union, 2019 Cover photo: © Andrey Kuzmin, Shutterstock.com ABOUT THE PUBLISHER This paper has been drawn up by the Public Opinion Monitoring Unit within the Directorate–General for Communication (DG COMM) of the European Parliament. To contact the Public Opinion Monitoring Unit please write to: [email protected] LINGUISTIC VERSION Original: EN DISCLAIMER This document is prepared for, and primarily addressed to, the Members and staff of the European Parliament to assist them in their parliamentary work. The content of the document is the sole responsibility of its author(s) and any opinions expressed herein should not be taken to represent an official position of the Parliament. TABLE OF CONTENTS EDITORIAL 1 1. COMPOSITION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT 5 DISTRIBUTION OF SEATS OVERVIEW 1979 - 2019 6 COMPOSITION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT LAST UPDATE (31/07/2019) 7 CONSTITUTIVE SESSION (02/07/2019) AND OUTGOING EP SINCE 1979 8 PROPORTION OF WOMEN AND MEN PROPORTION - LAST UPDATE 02/07/2019 28 PROPORTIONS IN POLITICAL GROUPS - LAST UPDATE 02/07/2019 29 PROPORTION OF WOMEN IN POLITICAL GROUPS - SINCE 1979 30 2. NUMBER OF NATIONAL PARTIES IN THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT CONSTITUTIVE SESSION 31 3.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloads/JB2017 K3(1).Pdf (Last Accessed on 20Th December 2018)
    THE TREMBLING OF A COMPLEX REGIONAL CONSOCIATION: 2018 PROVINCIAL ELECTION IN SOUTH TYROL Guido Panzano ECMI WORKING PAPER #112 December 2018 ECMI- Working Paper # 112 The European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) is a non-partisan institution founded in 1996 by the Governments of the Kingdom of Denmark, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the German State of Schleswig-Holstein. ECMI was established in Flensburg, at the heart of the Danish-German border region, in order to draw from the encouraging example of peaceful coexistence between minorities and majorities achieved here. ECMI’s aim is to promote interdisciplinary research on issues related to minorities and majorities in a European perspective and to contribute to the improvement of interethnic relations in those parts of Western and Eastern Europe where ethno- political tension and conflict prevail. ECMI Working Papers are written either by the staff of ECMI or by outside authors commissioned by the Centre. As ECMI does not propagate opinions of its own, the views expressed in any of its publications are the sole responsibility of the author concerned. ECMI Working Paper # 112 European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) Director: Prof. Dr. Tove H. Malloy © ECMI 2018 ISSN 1435-9812; ISSN-Internet 2196-4890 2 | P a g e ECMI- Working Paper # 112 THE TREMBLING OF A COMPLEX REGIONAL CONSOCIATION: 2018 PROVINCIAL ELECTION IN SOUTH TYROL Located in the northeastern part of Italy, the Autonomous Province of Bolzano/Bozen, also known with the historical name of South Tyrol, is one of the two provinces of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol region. It is a border region and a deeply divided place, w ith a majority of German-speaking population (62.3%) and minorities of Italians (23.4%), Ladins (4.1%) and past and recent migrants (10.2%).
    [Show full text]
  • Forty Years of Populism in the European Parliament1 Luca Manucci2
    População e Sociedade 25 População e Sociedade CEPESE Porto, vol. 35 jun 2021, pp. 25-42 DOI: https://doi.org/10.52224/21845263/rev35a2 Forty years of populism in the European Parliament1 Luca Manucci2 Abstract: In May 2019, the elections for the European Parliament (EP) saw populist parties obtain almost a third of the available seats, with populist radical right parties making the biggest gains compared to the 2014 elections. Despite the results were less resounding than some predictions anticipated, a considerable amount of Members of the EP represent a populist party. This article first presents the performance of populist parties in forty years of EP elections, from their first occurrence in 1979 until 2019, and then focuses on populist radical right parties. The analysis suggests that (i) the number of seats occupied by populist parties in the EP continues to grow over time; (ii) right-wing populist parties no longer struggle to form political groups within the EP; (iii) radical right populist parties have become the most common type of populist party within the EP. Keywords: European Parliament; elections; populism; parties; political groups. Introduction Looking at forty years of elections for the European Parliament (EP), one of the most striking phenomena that took place is the constant growth of populist parties in terms of their overall number, electoral performance, and number of seats they occupy. This phenomenon is not particularly surprising since populist parties grew also in national elections during the same period, but it is significant because their growing influence poses serious questions about the European Union (EU), its common identity, its principles, and its future.
    [Show full text]
  • Separatism and Regionalism in Modern Europe
    Separatism and Regionalism in Modern Europe Separatism and Regionalism in Modern Europe Edited by Chris Kostov Logos Verlag Berlin λογος Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de . Book cover art: c Adobe Stock: Silvio c Copyright Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH 2020 All rights reserved. ISBN 978-3-8325-5192-6 The electronic version of this book is freely available under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence, thanks to the support of Schiller University, Madrid. Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH Georg-Knorr-Str. 4, Gebäude 10 D-12681 Berlin - Germany Tel.: +49 (0)30 / 42 85 10 90 Fax: +49 (0)30 / 42 85 10 92 https://www.logos-verlag.com Contents Editor's introduction7 Authors' Bios 11 1 The EU's MLG system as a catalyst for separatism: A case study on the Albanian and Hungarian minority groups 15 YILMAZ KAPLAN 2 A rolling stone gathers no moss: Evolution and current trends of Basque nationalism 39 ONINTZA ODRIOZOLA,IKER IRAOLA AND JULEN ZABALO 3 Separatism in Catalonia: Legal, political, and linguistic aspects 73 CHRIS KOSTOV,FERNANDO DE VICENTE DE LA CASA AND MARÍA DOLORES ROMERO LESMES 4 Faroese nationalism: To be and not to be a sovereign state, that is the question 105 HANS ANDRIAS SØLVARÁ 5 Divided Belgium: Flemish nationalism and the rise of pro-separatist politics 133 CATHERINE XHARDEZ 6 Nunatta Qitornai: A party analysis of the rhetoric and future of Greenlandic separatism 157 ELLEN A.
    [Show full text]
  • Internet and Voting in the Web 2.0 Era: Evidence from a Local Broadband Policy
    Internet and Voting in the Web 2.0 Era: Evidence from a Local Broadband Policy Samuele Poy Simone Schüller CESIFO WORKING PAPER NO. 6129 CATEGORY 2: PUBLIC CHOICE OCTOBER 2016 An electronic version of the paper may be downloaded • from the SSRN website: www.SSRN.com • from the RePEc website: www.RePEc.org • from the CESifo website: www.CESifoT -group.org/wpT ISSN 2364-1428 CESifo Working Paper No. 6129 Internet and Voting in the Web 2.0 Era: Evidence from a Local Broadband Policy Abstract This article analyzes the impact of a local broadband expansion policy on electoral turnout and party vote share. We exploit a unique policy intervention involving staged broadband infrastructure installation across rural municipalities in the Province of Trento (Italy), thus generating a source of exogenous (spatial and temporal) variation in the provision of advanced broadband technology (ADSL2+). Using a difference-in-differences strategy, we find positive effects of broadband availability on overall electoral turnout at national parliamentary elections. Party vote share analysis shows significant shifts across the ideological spectrum. These shifts, however, are likely transitory rather than persistent. Placebo estimations support a causal interpretation of our results. We provide further evidence that broadband availability is linked to actual adoption in that the broadband policy increased overall Internet and broadband take-up among private households. JEL-Codes: D720, L820, L860. Keywords: broadband internet, political participation, voting behavior, quasi-natural experiment. Samuele Poy Simone Schüller* Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore Ifo Institute – Leibniz Institute for Milan / Italy Economic Research [email protected] at the University of Munich Poschingerstrasse 5 Germany – 81679 Munich [email protected] *corresponding author 1 Introduction The impact of new technology on society is the subject of intense debate in the social sciences.
    [Show full text]
  • Austria͛s Internaional Posiion After the End Of
    ƵƐƚƌŝĂ͛Ɛ/ŶƚĞƌŶĂƟŽŶĂůWŽƐŝƟŽŶ ĂŌĞƌƚŚĞŶĚŽĨƚŚĞŽůĚtĂƌ Günter Bischof, Ferdinand Karlhofer (Eds.) CONTEMPORARY AUSTRIAN STUDIES | VOLUME 22 UNO PRESS innsbruck university press Copyright © 2013 by University of New Orleans Press, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage nd retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. All inquiries should be addressed to UNO Press, University of New Orleans, LA 138, 2000 Lakeshore Drive. New Orleans, LA, 70119, USA. www.unopress.org. Printed in the United States of America Design by Lauren Capone Cover photo credit: Hopi Media Published in the United States by Published and distributed in Europe University of New Orleans Press: by Innsbruck University Press ISBN: 9781608011162 ISBN: 9783902936011 UNO PRESS Contemporary Austrian Studies Sponsored by the University of New Orleans and Universität Innsbruck Editors Günter Bischof, CenterAustria, University of New Orleans Ferdinand Karlhofer, Universität Innsbruck Assistant Editor Production and Copy Editor Dominik Hofmann-Wellenhof Lauren Capone University of New Orleans Executive Editors Christina Antenhofer, Universität Innsbruck Kevin Graves, University of New Orleans Advisory Board Siegfried Beer Sándor Kurtán Universität Graz Corvinus University Budapest Peter Berger Günther Pallaver Wirtschaftsuniversität
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Explaining the Immigrant Integration Laws of German, Italian And
    Explaining the immigrant integration laws of German, Italian and Spanish regions: Sub-state nationalism and multi-level party politics Christina Isabel Zuber, University of Konstanz, [email protected] Preprint accepted for publication at Regional Studies, March 2019 Abstract How do sub-state regions respond to immigration and what drives their policy choices? Combining the cross-national literature on citizenship and integration policy with the literature on immigration federalism, I hypothesize that sub-state nationalism and multi-level party politics explain why some regions formulate more restrictive immigrant integration policies than others. Analysing integration laws of German, Italian, and Spanish regions demonstrates that socio-economically inclusive measures dominate, regardless of national context. Where restrictive provisions occur at all, they are associated with minority nationalism and the strength of anti-immigrant parties, while leftist regions facing right-wing national governments tend to adopt more inclusive policies. Keywords Immigrant integration policies; sub-state nationalism; party politics; Germany; Italy; Spain JEL Codes D78 - Positive Analysis of Policy-Making and Implementation D7 - Analysis of Collective Decision-Making 1 Acknowledgments I thank Romy Hansum, Katharina Potinius and Annika Stein for excellent research assistance with collecting and coding the integration laws, and Leonce Röth for generously sharing data on regional party politics and regional economies. Previous versions of this paper were presented at the ECPR Joint Sessions of Workshops 2017 in Nottingham and the CES 2017 Annual Conference in Glasgow. Very helpful comments were given by Ilke Adam, Alexandra Filindra, Sean Müller, Lorenzo Piccoli, Anita Manatschal, Michael Tatham, as well as by two anonymous referees. The research was supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG), Cluster of Excellence 16, Cultural Foundations of Social Integration.
    [Show full text]
  • Securitizing Borders: the Case of South Tyrol
    Nationalities Papers (2021), 1–19 doi:10.1017/nps.2021.14 ARTICLE Securitizing Borders: The Case of South Tyrol Andrea Carlà* Eurac Research – Institute for Minority Rights, Bolzano/Bozen, Italy *Corresponding author. Email: [email protected] Abstract Situated at the interplay between ethnic politics, migration, border, and security studies, this contribution analyzes processes of securitization of borders in South Tyrol, an Italian province bordering Austria and Switzerland with a German- and Ladin-speaking population and a past of ethnic tensions. South Tyrol is considered a model for fostering peaceful interethnic relations thanks to a complex power-sharing system. However, the arrival of migrants from foreign countries and the more recent influx of asylum seekers have revitalized debates around the borders between South Tyrol/Italy and Austria and among South Tyrolean linguistic groups. The current COVID-19 pandemic has brought further complexity to the issue. I use the concept of securitization—the process through which an issue is considered as an existential threat requiring exceptional measures—in order to understand why and how borders become exclusionary and restrictive, shaping dynamics of othering. With this framework, the article explores how South Tyrolean borders have been subjected to (de)securitizing and resecuritizing moves in discourses and practices. In this way, I shed new light on debates on the articulation of borders and interethnic relations that are occurring due to recent international migration, consolidation of nationalist agendas, and the current pandemic. Keywords: borders; securitization; South Tyrol; migration; interethnic relations Introduction Even as we celebrated the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, one of the most notorious borders in recent human history, the subject of borders has never been so present and relevant.
    [Show full text]
  • Between Consolidated Autonomy and Separatist Claims: a European Perspective on Present-Day South Tyrol
    Journal on Ethnopolitics and Minority Issues in Europe Vol 17, No 3, 2018, 67-86. Copyright © ECMI 2018 This article is located at: http://www.ecmi.de/fileadmin/downloads/publications/JEMIE/2018/Cr epaz.pdf Between Consolidated Autonomy and Separatist Claims: a European Perspective on Present-Day South Tyrol Katharina Crepaz, Ph.D.* Max Planck Institute for Social Law and Social Policy and Technical University of Munich Abstract This article looks at the development of the autonomy in South Tyrol (Italy). It traces its path from a minority protection instrument contested by the Italian-speaking majority population to being viewed as a necessary precondition for an efficiently managed region with peaceful cohabitation of all three linguistic groups (German, Italian, Ladin). Using official statistical and survey data as well as previous scholarly research, the article argues that the autonomy is now consolidated and enjoys broader acceptance than ever before among all linguistic groups; South Tyrol has therefore reached a state of consolidated regionalism. However, nationalist and separatist ideas are on the rise in many European countries, and South Tyrol does not constitute an exception. By contextualizing South Tyrolean separatists with other separatist movements in Europe, the article will try to show that support for secession is low in South Tyrol, and even if an official referendum was possible, a pro-separatist outcome would be far from secure. Meanwhile, Austria, being the kin-state of South Tyrol’s German-speaking population, is discussing different means for establishing closer ties with the German community in South Tyrol, e.g. granting Austrian double citizenship to German- and Ladin-speaking South Tyroleans.
    [Show full text]
  • Elezioni Trentino-Alto Adige 2018, Risultati Ufficiali: a Bolzano Primo SVP, a Trento Vince Fugatti Sistema Di Voto E Candidati
    Elezioni Trentino-Alto Adige 2018, risultati ufficiali: a Bolzano primo SVP, a Trento vince Fugatti Alessandro Cipolla - 24 Ottobre 2018 - 09:17 Doppia elezione dei consigli provinciali di Trento e Bolzano: SVP vince a Bolzano dove la Lega cresce, a Trento trionfa il centrodestra con Fugatti. Si sono tenute domenica 21 ottobre 2018, dalle ore 07 alle 21, le elezioni regionali in Trentino Alto Adige, momento in cui le due province autonome di Trento e Bolzano sono andate alle urne per eleggere i propri consigli provinciali che poi andranno a formare quello regionale. Si è trattato quindi di due voti distinti con sistemi elettorali e candidati differenti. Le operazioni di spoglio a differenza delle elezioni regionali precedenti in Trentino-Alto Adige sono iniziate subito dopo la chiusura delle urne: prima sono arrivati i risultati ufficiali di Bolzano e poi quelli di Trento. Sistema di voto e candidati a Bolzano Chiuse le urne, ecco i risultati ufficiali dopo lo spoglio di 495 sezioni su 495. 1. Team Köllensperger - 15,2% 2. Süd-Tiroler Freiheit - 5,9% 3. Die Freiheitlichen - 6,2% 4. Bürgerunion für Südtirol - 1,3% 5. Forza Italia - 1% 6. SVP Südtiroler Volkspartei - 41,9% 7. Noi Alto Adige Südtirol - 1,2% 8. Verdi - Grüne – Verc - 6,8% 9. Vereinte Linke Sinistra unita - 0,6% 10. L’Alto Adige nel cuore Fratelli d’Italia uniti - 1,7% 11. Lega Nord - 11,1% 12. PD Partito Democratico - Demokratische Partei - 3,8% 13. Casapound Italia - 0,9% 14. MoVimento 5 Stelle - 2,3% Come era lecito aspettarsi a vincere queste elezioni è quindi SVP, anche se in calo rispetto alla precedente votazione.
    [Show full text]