In this edition, the quarterly magazine of the Party of the European Left focuses on the future development of the EU and political strategies for the left in Europe.
Quistioni, referring to the way in which Antonio Gramsci indicated the matters, the problems, aims at creating a space for discussion between those who want to build an alternative to this neo-liberal world. The magazine is published in three languages: English, French and Spanish.
To read Quistioni, please click here (PDF, website of the Party of the European Left).
Table of Contents
Editorials
Heinz Bierbaum (Berlin) – Europe and the Left
Paolo Ferrero (Turin) – Some analysis insights on the politics of the European ruling
classes
Interventions
Matyas Benyik (Budapest) – Prague Spring 2 Network against right wing extremism and
populism
Paola Boffo (Rome) – How the European Union is changing: some reflections
Vincent Boulet (Paris) – The future of Europe: no adjustments, but another European
construction!
Michael Brie (Berlin) – Don’t repeat the West’s Greatest Folly. Criticism of the Chinese
government may be justified, but warmed-over anti-communism will lead to a new Cold
war
Xavier Dupret (Brussels) – A plea for an alternative Ecb
Silvano Falocco (Rome) – The great battle of green finance
Mamdouh Habashi (Cairo) – The EU: where to?
Cornelia Hildebrandt (Berlin/Vienna) and Marga Ferré (Madrid) – Left Proposals are not
enough, we need strategies to enforce them
Pierre Laurent (Paris) – Europe will not be the same as before, it is up to us to change it
Francisco Louçã (Lisbon) – European rulers are the danger to Europe
Íñigo Martínez Zatón (Bilbao) – From a Europe of competitiveness to a Europe of
cooperation
Dimitrios Papadimoulis (Athens) – Opportunities and challenges for a new Europe in the
era of the pandemic
Jeremy Smith (London) – The future of Europe – high time for democracy in the
economic sphere
Contributions
Franco Russo (Rome) – EU: pandemic and innovation processes
European Left – Conference on the Future of Europe – Considerations from the Left Perspective
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