Language: Italian
Content: The first part-focusing on the concepts of national sovereignty and international solidarity-collects analyses concerning the increasingly complex relations between national sovereignty and international solidarity and reflections on the delicate relationship of forces between an increasingly weak sovereignty and an increasingly strong solidarity. The authors discuss the theoretical and historical assumptions of the Westphalian system, resulting in a kind of ideal excursus that contemplates both a reading of the past and a projection of the future. Beginning with the rethinking of international relations in the age of globalization to an analysis of contemporary events, the implications of balancing the weakness of the nation-state and the growing strength of international solidarity are considered.
The second part outlines the highly topical concept of national reconciliation, illustrating its constituent elements. The not easy restorative justice processes related to national reconciliation are specified and contextualized in the Italian, South African, Chilean, Angolan, Croatian and French cases. The Irish, Argentine, Cambodian, Croatian, Sub-Saharan African, and CIS Asian Republics examples constitute the geopolitical coordinates within which the transition strategies inherent in all national reconciliation are focused.





