Visions and Forms of Democratic Participation in Italian Universities after 1968
- Autori: Mauro Antonio Buscemi
- Anno di pubblicazione: 2022
- Tipologia: Capitolo o Saggio
- OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/580190
Abstract
The essay focuses on the ideological aspects and organizational dynamics underlying the 1968 protests in Italian universities. It analyses the inter-generational confrontation within the parties and in the wider public sphere in order to explain the new assembly-based organization in the Italian university. Young people in many countries demanded new spaces for a more direct political action; in Italy this would foster a change in the university representatives and parliamentary bodies which had so far mediated student participation. The UNURI (Italian University’s National Representative Union), founded in 1948, would suffer a crisis in 1968 precisely on the thrust of requests from youth initiatives increasingly freed from party control. Countering the representative logic of UNURI, the student movement proclaimed a democracy based on direct assembly. The university thus became a place to think and implement new democratic practices, tested in the context of academic institutions unable to update their representative role and meet the strong demand for student participation.