Volume 34, Issue 1 p. 121-150

The parliamentary elite in transition

Luca Verzichelli

Corresponding Author

Luca Verzichelli

University of Siena, Italy

Correspondence to: Luca Verzichelli, Dr Luca Verzichelli, Dipartimento di Scienze Politiche, Giuridiche e Sociali, Università di Siena, Piazza San Francesco 7, I–53100 Siena, Italy Fax: +39 577 298754 [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 26 September 2003
Citations: 16

Abstract

Abstract Only two years after the critical elections of 27 March 1994, the Italian parliamentary election of 1996 marks another important step in the transformation of the political class. The extent of turnover is declining, and the renewal of the parliamentary elite shows some signs of stabilization. This article inquires into the differences in the sociological configuration of the new elite, and whether this means that new consolidated pathways to the parliamentary elite now already exist. The article analyzes the distribution of freshmen in the political class, the return of old backbenchers in the new political parties, the social and occupational background of MPs and, finally, their local and political experiences. In the final section, the article discusses some hypotheses about the perspectives on the recruitment of Italian MPs, focusing in particular on the effects of the structural crisis of political parties and the introduction of the plurality system. An empirically–derived typology of professionalization patterns is also provided.