Europeanization as Pragmatic Politics: Italy’s Civil Society Actors Operating in the Face of Right-Wing Populism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conceptualizing Transnationalization in the European Context
2.1. CSOs’ Europeanization in Europe’s Multilayered Governance Structure
2.2. Empirical Data and Methodological Approaches
3. Delegitimizing Italy’s CSOs in the Wake of the Populist–Nationalist Resurgence
“In Italy the thing that worried us a lot was not only the specific issue, i.e., the criminalization of those who provided rescue at sea, but then by extension the delegitimization of anyone who did not fall into the private or public category, therefore NGOs, social movements, anyone who did not recognize themselves in being a private or a public enterprise.”(Int. 4)
“In recent times, to be honest, there has been a certain reluctance that has been somewhat telling in itself, a sort of hesitancy from politicians to accept our invitation. We do keep inviting them to take part, but in recent years there has sometimes been a sort of rejection.”(Int. 14)
4. Italy’s CSOs’ Vertical and Horizontal Transnationalization in a European Space
“Clearly, considering the right-wing occurrences [in Europe] [from Sweden, to Italy and to Hungary and France] we are faced with a right that is based on very strong identities. I believe there will be a temptation to backtrack on a whole series of issues related to rights, which will start above all from narrative and then possibly transform into regulatory measures. And if this were to happen, Europe becomes useful”.(24a)
4.1. Vertical Transnationalization: Legal Mobilization for Migrants’ Rights
“Moving in a context in which you have a common regulatory framework to which you must refer to, supranational courts to which you can turn and whose jurisprudence has relevance at an internal level is important because it allows you to act from one level to another and bring these two levels, the national and the supranational, into contact in a much, much simpler way.”(Int. 23b)
4.2. Vertical Transnationalization: Shaping the EU’s Agenda
“(…) then since 2015 2016—because in our case we used to focus more on the internal Italian borders, on what was happening there—we tried to be more attentive to what was happening in neighbouring countries and therefore to build the network with the French, the network with the Swiss, the network with the Austrians and so on.”(Int. 23b)
“The European perspective is eternally present because for many years, even with the reports and campaigns we have promoted on the topic of external borders, we have been calling for a European dimension. (…) There are obviously specific advocacy actions on which networking is simpler: if you write an appeal, if you write an open letter it is clear that you can easily network, but more structured initiatives are much more complex”.(Int. 2)
“Now we are focusing above all on the possible reform of the Schengen border code, because it is a reform that (…) could impact both external and internal borders. And because it could introduce at a European level the same mechanism that we have today for readmissions from Italy, Slovenia from Greece.”(Int. 23b)
“The challenge was to be able to start from very small interventions, which called into question the approach of European policies, and instead bring the big issues to the attention of Italian and European public opinion. (…).”(Int. 22)
“Clearly we immediately accepted, partly because we already had the network and the experience of collecting signatures ready (…) we were all still very excited at the idea of being able to do something at European level. (…) in short, it seemed to us to be an almost obligatory step, therefore not only concerning national legislation, but also trying to change European legislation.”(Int. 22)
“Ero Straniero has expanded and managed to incorporate many other organizations, including those that do not only deal with immigration. So certainly the first legacy [of the ECI] is fostering our ability to mobilize and also its recognition at the level of civil society, also means being able to talk about denunciation, talk about criminalization which at the time was somewhat the topic that was closest to the heart of many CSOs.”(Int. 22)7
“(…) Similarly, in December 2018, the European Parliament approved a resolution requesting that the European Commission present a legislative proposal which was aimed at establishing a European Humanitarian Visa. However we know well that it didn’t go through and we know how much difficulty we had.”(Int. 24b)
“We arrived at an acceptable reform in the European Parliament which went beyond the approach based on the country of first arrival. It would have meant a change of approach to solidarity. And therefore to the founding values of the Union. That reform completely failed, because the Commission tore it down. Nothing has changed in the new European pact on asylum and immigration when compared to Dublin. Actually, it has become all externalization. So, the fact that it could not be changed despite having come so close was a big disappointment.”(Int. 22)
“The European network could not resist because it was still aimed at that objective of the agreement. Among the signatories, however, the form, desire and intent to continue working together remained. However, on a national level, not on a European level.”(Int. 22)
4.3. Horizontal Transnationalization: Mutual Learning and Solidarity across National Borders
“And already in the autumn of 2015 (…) to create these safe passages we gradually came to know that in every city there was a network, there was an association and there was someone. And it was decided to give even more strength to these safe corridors, to get to know each other better, to talk to each other, to share problematic experiences, but also good practices.”(Int. 18)
“You cannot hold up a struggle on certain rights issues if you do not have a transnational solidarity network. It is hard to win alone as a single country. The narratives that dominate the entire continent are the ones that, in the end, produce the norms that are imposed at the national level.”(Int. 24a)
“There was great solidarity between all the various associations. Clearly, how should we put it, experiencing the daily emergency, everyone in their own country, the differences from country to country, individual personalities and individual events… clearly it wasn’t all smooth sailing. There was not a single large European association to turn to. I would be lying to say that everything went well.”(Int. 18)
“It is also a direct monitoring activity. Sometimes we are in the field, but much more often we make necessary reference to all the other realities and all the other actors who are in the field every day, from Ventimiglia to Greece, from Trieste to the Italian-Austrian border. For us the network must be understood as a group of entities that act at different levels on the territory or on several territories or at different levels, politically understood as political levels, for us it is fundamental to be able to act, both by carrying out advocacy actions and judicial litigation actions”.(Int. 23a)
“We try to give evidence to the judge that at the moment in which the Italian authorities made a move towards Slovenia and then towards the Slovenian authorities and towards Croatia, they were in a position to know what would have happened subsequently.”(Int. 23a)
“Never since I started dealing with these things have I felt like a truly European citizen. Sometimes I actually forget that I’m Italian.”(Int. 18)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Main Themes and Text-Based Categories9
- A.
- Political constraints at the national level
- Left-right continuum of policies (44%)
- Rise of anti-immigrant and populist parties (44%)
- Expansion of negative framing from SAR NGOs to CSOs (44%)
- Absence of institutional counterpart (41%)
- B.
- Drivers of transnationalization
- A more developed and binding supranational legal framework at the EU level (37%)
- Migration as a European issue (33%)
- Aim to change EU’s approach to the EU’s external border management (33%)
- Lack of proper implementation of EU’s directives at the national level (11%)
- C.
- Types of transnational actions at the European level
- Interacting with EU institutions (reports; consultations; national MeP members) (59%)
- Networking with other CSOs in Europe (52%)
- Advocacy (41%)
- Legal mobilization/strategic litigation (29%)
- Solidarity activities (15%)
- Writing/co-writing legislative proposals (11%)
- Petitions, European citizens’ initiative (7%)
- D.
- Obstacles to transnationalization
- Limited know-how (15%)
- Limited staff (11%)
- Limited funds (7%)
- E.
- The European dimension
- Useful (70%)
- Necessary for funding opportunities (48%)
- Barrier against the rise of nationalist/right politics in Europe (19%)
- Closer to younger generations in CSOs (19%)
- Complicit in securitization of borders (19%)
- Source of egalitarian push (15%)
1 | The interviews and other documents were transcribed and coded according to the main themes related to how CSOs depict the political environment in which they operate and the way in which they describe how their organizations are engaged in the transnational realm (for a fuller account of the coding process see the methodological Appendix A). The key objective of this discursive analysis was to identify recurring issues, themes and narratives concerning the transnational dimension of their advocacy activities. We adopted an inductive approach in coding and interpreting the texts. This methodological approach allowed us to identify emerging patterns and themes related to the practice of transnational engagement that CSOs displayed in the Italian context. Methodologically, the article relies on a discourse analysis of textual material paying particular attention to the depiction and framing of experiences of conducting political advocacy and pursuing transnational opportunities (Jørgensen and Phillips 2002). |
2 | All quotations from the interviews were translated from Italian by the authors. |
3 | Their so-called “Yellow–Green” government passed the 32/18 governmental legislation “Decree-Law on Immigration and Security” in December 2018 and the “Decree-Law on Immigration and Security n°53” of 14th June 2019, which transformed solidarity into a crime punishable by law with severe juridical consequences (Pusterla 2021, p. 79). |
4 | A centre-right coalition formed at its core by the Partito delle libertà (Freedoms party) and Lega Nord (the predecessor of Matteo Salvini’s Lega). |
5 | Our translation from Italian. |
6 | Press release of the campaign by one of the participants: https://www.asgi.it/ingresso-soggiorno/ero-straniero-days-firme-decine-citta-cambiare-la-legge-sullimmigrazione/ (accessed on 3 June 2023). |
7 | The initiative saw the participation of dozens of civil society organizations of different sizes and structures, including Legambiente, The Federation of Italian Evangelical Churches, Oxfam, ActionAid, A Buon Diritto, Baobab Experience, and the Coalition for Civil Liberties and Rights (CILD). |
8 | More specifically, the ECI’s target was the EU’s Facilitators’ Package and the Trafficking Directives. Its first demand was that the European Commission amend article 1(2) of the EU facilitation directive (2002/90/EC) to prevent Member States from imposing sanctions on individuals or NGOs that provide humanitarian assistance. |
9 | The percentages reflect how many interviews the particular themes appeared in. The categories are not mutually exclusive. |
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Mat, F.; Chiodi, L.; Schmidtke, O. Europeanization as Pragmatic Politics: Italy’s Civil Society Actors Operating in the Face of Right-Wing Populism. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 205. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040205
Mat F, Chiodi L, Schmidtke O. Europeanization as Pragmatic Politics: Italy’s Civil Society Actors Operating in the Face of Right-Wing Populism. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(4):205. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040205
Chicago/Turabian StyleMat, Fazila, Luisa Chiodi, and Oliver Schmidtke. 2024. "Europeanization as Pragmatic Politics: Italy’s Civil Society Actors Operating in the Face of Right-Wing Populism" Social Sciences 13, no. 4: 205. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040205
APA StyleMat, F., Chiodi, L., & Schmidtke, O. (2024). Europeanization as Pragmatic Politics: Italy’s Civil Society Actors Operating in the Face of Right-Wing Populism. Social Sciences, 13(4), 205. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040205