Historian and political scientist Giorgio Galli passed away, he was 92 years old



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Historian and political scientist Giorgio Galli, longtime professor of the history of political doctrines at the University of Milan and the author of numerous essays on contemporary history, died this Sunday. According to sources close to the family cited by Daily occurrenceGalli, 92, reportedly felt ill while in Camogli, in the province of Genoa.

Galli was known, among other things, for writing in 1966 Imperfect bipartisanship, a book that contained a theory that had quite good fortune, used to describe the Italian political system of those years: according to Galli, in Italy the tendency to bipartisanship common to all Western democracies could not be fully fulfilled due to the insufficiency of the two main parties, the Christian Democracy and the Communist Party, and the particular historical context of the time.

In the 1960s, Galli was editor of the magazine for five years. The mill and in the following decades he collaborated with several magazines, among them Panorama me Linus. As an essayist, he addressed the most diverse and controversial historical and political issues, from the armed struggle to the history of the Communist Party, from the links between Nazism and esotericism to Licio Gelli and the P2 lodge. He also edited an Italian version of the My fight, published by Kaos. His latest book was published last November: it’s called Imperfect anti-capitalism.



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