The
International Spectator
Volume XXXIV, No. 2
April-June 1999
Gli anni della Farnesina : pagine del diario
1961-1967 / di Egidio Ortona. - Milano : SPAI, c1998. - 185
p.
A posthumous book by one of the actors of Italian postwar diplomacy. Drawn
from the diary kept while he was Director General of Economic Affairs
at the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) and later Secretary General
of the Ministry itself, these pages shed light on particular international
events of the sixties, as seen from the MFA: three moments in the difficult
road to the European Community (Great Britains request for accession,
the crisis on the question of the vote, the first decade after the Treaty
of Rome), trade negotiations with the Soviet Union and with Somalia, and
relations with the Kennedies.
LArgentina, gli italiani, lItalia
: un altro destino / di Ludovico Incisa di Camerana. - Milano
: SPAI, c1998. - 778 p.
The result of an accurate study, this hefty volume is devoted to the history
of relations between Argentina and Italy from Italys birth as a
nation to date. The author, a former Italian ambassador to Caracas and
Buenos Aires (1985-91), highlights the Italians contribution to
the formation of the Argentine social structure from the working
class to the entrepreneurial upper class and the Argentine national
identity. At the same time, he criticises Italys desultory official
attitude towards the Latin American country, and hopes for closer joint
development between Italy and Argentina.
The Baltic states: problems and prospects of
membership in the European Union / Dzintra Bungs. - Baden-Baden
: Nomos Verl.-Ges., 1988. - 130 p. - (Aktuelle Materialen sur Internationalen
Politik ; Bd.55). - ISBN 3-7890-5591-3
A research study on the future membership of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania
in the European Union seen from the point of view of the Baltic countries
themselves.
The book concentrates mainly on the period from August 1991 to January
1998 and tries to identify, in its nine chapters, the results achieved
to date by the various countries, as well as the problems and difficulties,
and future objectives.
Without predicting when the Baltic countries will enter the EU, the author
underlines the concomitance of external factors that could delay accession,
such as the "disturbing" actions of Russia, revising its areas
of interest.
Italy, Europe and the Left : the transformation
of Italian communism and the European imperative / Vassilis
Fouskas. - Aldershot : Ashgate, c1998. - xvi, 253 p. - ISBN 1-84014-450-5
In an attempt to retrace the crisis and transformation of the Italian
Communist Party (PCI) into the Democratic Party of the Left, this essay
sets it into the social, economic and especially political context - the
crisis of the Italian political system at the time, rejecting simplistic
explanations.
The books two parts correspond to two periods in Italian history:
the first retraces the history of the PCI from the Fascist period through
the "historical compromise" to Enrico Berlinguers "democratic
alternative"; the second goes over the evolution of the PCI from
Eurocommunism to the current debate/conflict between new revisionism and
Communist refoundation via Achille Occhettos "new course",
the crisis of the eighties and the "constituent phase", all
set against the background of the crisis of actually existing socialism
and Eastern Europe.
The thesis put forward is that the events of the East were only a catalyst
for the partys transformation, which should on the other hand be
seen as closely intertwined with the crisis of the Keynesian state and
the system of power of the so-called First Republic, as well as the European
integration process.
Is Japan really changing its ways? : regulatory
reform and the Japanese economy / Lonny E. Carlile, Mark C.
Tilton editors. - Washington : Brookings Institution Press, c1998. - xii,
232 p. - ISBN 0-8157-1292-8 (cloth)
Experts on various aspects of Japanese regulation have written the eight
chapters of this book emanating from a research study and a workshop on
regulatory reform in Japan.
While reconstructing and analysing the rise of current regulations, identifying
the deep-seated motivations behind them, the study clarifies why it is
difficult to deregulate today and why regulatory reform is needed: i)
the states fiscal crisis and the need to reabsorb public debt; ii)
diplomatic pressure from abroad (e.g. the US) and fear of trade sanctions;
iii) the desire to revitalise the national economy; iv) the formation
of new political parties, some of which are in favour of regulatory reform.
Finally, in an attempt to determine the reasons for the negligible impact
that liberalising reforms have had on the Japanese market, the authors
essentially point to a bureaucratic "mesolevel" in economic
decision-making and a continuing strong presence of a "developmental"
state model.
After a description of the current scenario with its confrontation between
moderately reformist forces/drives and conservative forces, the authors
predict that it is unlikely that there will be a major change in the current
developmental model.
None of your business : world data flows, electronic
commerce and the European privacy directive / Peter P. Swire
and Robert E. Litan. - Washington : Brookings Institution Press, c1998.
- x, 269 p. - ISBN 0-8157-8240-3
A very timely publication on the possible effects that Directive 95/46/EC
of the European Parliament on the treatment of personal data, which entered
into force on 24 October 1998, could have on the US and its trade and
business with Europe. However, the situation illustrated by means of intensive
interviews with representatives of the various sectors affected by the
directive refers to May 1998.
The title may be interpreted in three ways: a) the protection of the fundamental
civic rights of European citizens from violation by other countries ("my
personal information is none of your business"); b) the concern of
non-European states on which the European Union is trying to impose extra-territorially
its rules in the field of privacy; and c) the possible protectionist effects
of the directive for American companies. But the book essentially offers
a systematic study, sector by sector (one for each of the five chapters
constituting the core of the book), the practical effects of the directive
in the field of modern information technology (Chap. 3); electronic commerce
(Chap. 4), the organisation of labour (Chap. 5), financial services (Chap.
6) and other trans-national activities (the press, non-profit, direct
marketing; Chap. 7).
It also provides an analysis of the transfer of data from the EU to third
countries and the interaction of the directive and information technology.
The next chapter is dedicated to policy recommendations suggesting a possible
mix of market rules, self-regulation and governmental action, achieved
by testing the limits of the existing regulatory instruments (technology,
market, media, etc.). Basically, the authors do not recommend states like
the US to introduce global and binding regulations, but rather to set
up a package of self-regulatory measures and, in the case of the United
States, an Office for Electronic Commerce and Privacy Policy (OECPP),
which would provide an institutional instrument to deal with problems
of privacy and electronic trade and to participate in the appropriate
fora in discussion of such problems. Furthermore, they point to a number
of points in the text of the directive which are ambiguous and must be
clarified.
In the ninth and last chapter, the authors sketch out possible future
implications of the matter, in particular with reference to the new models
for trade and communication in the Internet.
Regulatory and supervisory challenges in a new
era of global finance / edited by Jan Joost Teunissen. - The
Hague : FONDAD, c1998. - 276 p. - ISBN 90-74208-14-2
The proceedings of a conference organised by the Forum on Debt and Development
(FONDAD) on the financial crisis in developing and transition countries
in March 1998. The book is divided into several parts: the first two are
dedicated to the macroeconomic aspects of the crisis, that is, the global
implications and the international institutional approach, and therefore
also to a diagnosis; the next two parts look for remedies and therefore
address specific questions concerning national and international supervision
the real focus of the book; the fifth and last part contains the
conclusions and prospects for the future. The chapters author is
basically in favour of a global reform of the international financial
architecture, while the editor of the volume is more in favour of a balance
between reform and better management of the existing system.
Scandinavian politics today / David
Arter. - Manchester : Manchester University Press, c1999. - xvi, 366 p.
- (Politics today). - ISBN 0-7190-5133-9 (pbk)
Almost meant as a textbook for students of contemporary politics, this
book is centred on Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden and the three
"Home Rule territories", Greenland, Faeroes and Aland. The approach
is comparative and thematic, following the major issues of political science,
but with special regard for international relations.
The volume is divided into six parts: the first provides an historical
introduction going from the Vikings to the 20th century; the second retraces
the birth of the so-called Scandinavian model; the third covers the rise
of new parties and the changes in the party system that took place in
the seventies; the fourth analyses the Nordic model of government and
democracy, the role of economic lobbies, social policy and the well known
welfare state; the fifth part deals with the kind of parliamentary system
in Denmark, Norway and Sweden and the semi-presidentialism of Iceland
and Finland; the sixth and last chapter tackles security aspects in the
postwar period, during the Cold War and in the framework of the new united
Europe. The last chapter also presents the challenges that the Nordic
countries will face in the next millennium.
Subregional cooperation in the new Europe :
building security, prosperity and solidarity from the Barents to the Black
Sea / edited by Andrew Cottey. - Basingstoke : Macmillan ;
New York : St. Martins Press, 1999. - xvi, 280 p. - ISBN 0-333-73360-6.
- ISBN 0-312-22072-3
The initial results of a research study begun by the Institute for East
West Studies in 1996 and still under way focused on the role of geographically
and historically homogeneous (with respect to Europe) sub-regional groupings
in post-Cold War Europe: the Barents Euro-Arctic Council, the Council
of Baltic Sea States, the Visegrad group, the Central European Free Trade
Agreement, the Central European Initiative and the Black Sea Economic
Cooperation.
Each of the six chapters in the second part of the book is dedicated to
one of these groups, its establishment, its development and its future
prospects. The first part, on the other hand, contains two introductory
chapters, while the third analyses the role of sub-regional cooperation
in the context of the European security architecture and the fourth, finally,
recapitulates and presents the conclusions.
The balance sheet and the prospects for these experiences in the context
of the new Europe are substantially positive; still unsolved are the questions
relative to the security role of these groups and their relationship to
the major international institutions (WEU, NATO), that is, an equilibrium
between sub-regionalisation and "wider collective approaches"
to European security.
Surviving the stalemate: approaches to strengthening
the Palestinian Entity / Muriel Asseburg, Volker Perthes (eds.).
- Baden-Baden : Nomos Verl.-Ges., 1998. - 143 p. - (Conflict Prevention
Network ; Bd.2). - ISBN 3-7890-5570-0
This volume is made up of the revised and updated studies presented to
the European Commission and European Parliament by the Conflict Prevention
Network, an initiative undertaken by the European Commission to contribute
to the prevention of violent conflict by means of analytical and operational
input into the European system.
The two parts are made up of a policy paper and eight background papers,
respectively on the Palestinian political system, the extremists, the
political forces, the role of NGOs, human rights, the socio-economic situation
in the West Bank and Ghaza, economic development and European assistance.
As a whole, the book aims to draw attention to the conditions of the establishment
of a Palestinian state, pointing out that what is needed above all is
a strengthening of Palestinian society and more complementarity rather
than rivalry in the roles of the United States and Europe.
Towards rival regionalism? US and EU regional
regulatory regime building / Jens van Scherpenberg, Elke Thiel
(eds.). - Baden-Baden : Nomos Verl.-Ges., 1998. - 311 p. - (Aktuelle Materialen
zur Internationalen Politik ; Bd.54). - ISBN 3-7890-5590-5
This volume brings together the updated contributions to a conference-project
held in Ebenhausen and organised by the Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik
in 1996.
The focus is the inter-relation between three important aspects of current
international economic relations: the international trade agenda, the
liberalisation/regional integration of trade, the competition between
the United States and the European Union. In particular, the book investigates
the influence that transatlantic relations have on international regulatory
regime building.
Experts from various fields analyse the policies of regional economic
integration in the four sections into which the book is divided: the first
offers an overall framework and an analysis of the problem of division
of labour and the ambiguity of economic regionalism, setting some guidelines
for domestic regulatory reform; the second is made up of four case studies,
respectively on the process of integration in NAFTA/FTAA, Asia-Pacific
regionalism (APEC), the EU with particular reference to the entry of Central
and Eastern European countries, and the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership;
the third section is dedicated to cross-regional economic relations and
juxtaposes a piece on the EUs "new Asian policy" with
three contributions on EU-US rivalry as seen from Asian and Latin American
viewpoints; finally, the last section discusses the prospects for divergence
and for cooperation in transatlantic economic relations.
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