Sardinian_nationalism

Sardinian nationalism

Sardinian nationalism

Secessionist movement in Italy


Sardinian nationalism or also Sardism (Sardismu in Sardinian; Sardismo in Italian[1]) is a social, cultural and political movement in Sardinia calling for the self-determination of the Sardinian people in a context of national devolution, further autonomy in Italy, or even outright independence from the latter. It also promotes the protection of the island's environment and the preservation of its cultural heritage.

Pre-1999 flag of Sardinia; it is similar to the traditional flag of Corsica.
Location of Sardinia

Even though the island has been characterized by periodical waves of ethnonationalist protests against Rome,[2] the Sardinian movement has its origins on the left of the political spectrum;[3][4] regionalism and attempts for Sardinian self-determination historically countered in fact the Rome-centric Italian nationalism and fascism (which eventually managed to contain the autonomist and separatist tendencies[5]). Over the years many Sardist parties from different ideological backgrounds have emerged (even on the right and the centre), all being in the minority, and with some of them making government coalitions of variable geometry with the statewide Italian parties. For instance, that also happened in the 2014 Sardinian regional election,[6] where the combined result of all the nationalist parties had been 26% of the votes.[7]

History

In 1720, the Kingdom of Sardinia was definitely ceded by Spain to the House of Savoy after a plurisecular period of Spanish rule and a short-lived reconquest, abiding by the treaty of London that followed the War of Spanish Succession. The Savoyard kings, who were forced to accept this island in place of the much more populated and profitable Sicily, were not pleased with the exchange[8][9] to the point of making them want to dispose of what Cavour called "the third Ireland" later, according to Mazzini who denounced part of the plot, by repeatedly trying to sell it to either Austria[10] or France.[11][12][13][14] For a long time, Sardinia would be ruled in the same way as it was during the Spanish period, with its own parliament and government being composed exclusively of men from the Mainland. The only exception to this has been a series of revolutionary outburst (known collectively as "Sardinian Vespers") against the local Piedmontese notables in 1794, later led by Giovanni Maria Angioy, which ended only in the first years of the 19th century but did not succeed and were ultimately suppressed.[15]

In 1847, a segment of the Sardinian elites from Cagliari and Sassari, led by the unionist Giovanni Siotto Pintor, demanded the so-called Perfect Fusion,[16] making it so that Sardinia could get the liberal reforms that were not available for the island because of its separate legal system, and that "the culture and civilization of the Italian Mainland would be transplanted, without any reserves and obstacles, to Sardinia";[17] some Sardinian deputies in the minority, such as Federico Fenu, Giorgio Asproni and Giovanni Battista Tuveri, strongly protested against the Savoyard policies[18] and warned against the ramifications which Sardinia could face. In the end, the king Charles Albert agreed to the request from Turin; by doing so, he dissolved what political bodies remained that could exert a modicum of control on the king's decisions over the island. Moreover, the later enlargement moves in the Peninsula on the Savoyards' part, starting with the First Italian War of Independence, further aggravated the island's political and cultural marginalization with respect to the Mainland: Sardinia ended up being an even less significant overseas departement of the Savoyard domains, whose seat of power had always been located on the Italian peninsula.[16] The episode would lead most of the Sardinian unionists, including Pintor himself, to regret having made that proposal (Errammo tutti, "we all made a mistake"),[19][20] and would raise the "Sardinian Question" (questione sarda)[21][22][23][24] from then on, a broad term used to cover a wide variety of issues regarding the difficult relationship between Sardinia and the mainland.[25][26] It was in 1848 that the Sardinian intellectuals started to speak of "colonialism" in Sardinia.[27]

The Savoyard kings proceeded to expand their domains through the Unification of Italy: Sardinia, being already part of the Piedmontese Kingdom from the very beginning, automatically joined the new polity, which changed its name to become the Kingdom of Italy in 1861.

20th century

Sardism, which had been previously confined to the island's intellectuals, made its political debut for the first time on the occasion of Ireland's independence (1921) with Lussu's theories[18] and the Sardinian Action Party or PSd'Az (one of the oldest parties in Europe advocating for regional self-determination[28]), which got 36% of the popular vote in 1921 regional election.[29] Sardinian nationalism thus established itself as the most important mass movement in Sardinia, and the Psd'Az a political force that Benito Mussolini eventually banned in 1926;[5] the overt Sardists would then be forced into hiding and some of them participated in the main European fronts of anti-fascism (like Emilio Lussu, and Dino Giacobbe and Giuseppe Zuddas in the Spanish Civil War), while others decided to join the Fascist Party, hoping that by adhering to the regime Sardinia would get autonomy in exchange (a demand facing an immediate rejection) or at least some attention from the Mainland (which they eventually got through some moderate funding concentrated in Cagliari for the local infrastructures). Overall, rural Sardinia showed little interest in the Fascist state, let alone consent, while the bourgeois segments from the urban settlements were among the staunchest supporters of the regime on the island.[30] Following the Second World War, the Psd'Az, already weakened by the loss of many of its key members during the conflict, suffered a first split between the moderate wing and a much more radical one, led by Sebastiano Pirisi, which developed into another party (Lega Sarda, "Sardinian League") but ultimately got poor results in the 1946 Italian general election.[31]

The return of democracy coincided with the comeback of the previously cracked-down autonomist and separatist claims. A regional chamber to draft the Statute was created on 9 April 1945, but did not operate until as late as 26 April 1946, because of the slow pace of negotiations at each round of the talks. Lussu and the Sardinian Action Party championed in fact a solution that saw the island as a state associated with a federal country,[32][18] rather than being assimilated like an ordinary Italian region within a unitary framework, but such demands were met with strong opposition from the Italian statewide parties:[33] the Christian Democracy (DC), around which the majority of the island's notables were then gathered, supported in fact a generic regional framework with some devolution, geared towards accommodation for the central government in Rome; the Liberal Party (PLI) advocated for what little autonomy was needed to carry out only the administrative functions, without the capacity to create any regional laws; the Communist Party (PCI), which shut down the Communist Party of Sardinia two years earlier, was hostile to the idea of giving Sardinia any autonomy at all, the Italian Communists considering it a reactionary tool that stood in the way of a transformation towards a single Italian Communist society; the right-wing parties and the Common Man's Front were against the idea of Sardinian autonomy as well, because of Italian nationalism. In the end, the line prevailing was the one supported by the DC that, claiming to be willing to avoid "serious institutional conflicts", ditched the federal hypothesis in favour of a binary system of governance agreed upon the region and the central state. As much as some important authors in the field of Sardinian studies regard the granted Statute as Italy's definite acknowledgment of a distinct historical, geographic, social, ethnic and linguistic status,[34][35] the "Sardinian specialty" as a criterion for political autonomy ended up being specified just on the grounds of a couple of socio-economic issues devoid of any of the aforementioned considerations.[36][37] As time was pressing, the Sardinian regional Statute was eventually written by the Constituent Assembly in Rome, followed by a rapid review of each section and without further debate.[33] Some unique articles appeared in the final version, mentioning state-funded plans (going by the Italian piani di rinascita "rebirth plans"[38]) for the heavy industrial development of the island.

One hundred years had passed since the Perfect Fusion, when Sardinia became an autonomous region of Italy. However, the Statute upon which the autonomy was effectively based fell short of many Sardists' expectations. Upon viewing the draft of the Statute, Lussu's laconic comment was «this autonomy might as well fit into the family of federalism like a cat into the lion's».[18] The lawyer Gonario Pinna went as far as stating «the form of autonomy being currently promulgated is far from providing the island with a serious and organic capacity of self-rule, but rather hollows out its fundamental principles and shall lead to harsh disappointments whenever translated into practice».[39] The Psd'Az suffered another serious split in July, when Lussu left and founded the short-lived Sardinian Socialist Action Party.

The Sardist movement experienced a new wave of support at the end of the '60s, when the Sardinian society started becoming aware that its cultural heritage had been gradually vanishing; growing inequality was also being produced by a dual-economic structure, with the labour and resources being moved to the sector focused on the petrochemical industry[40] (particularly fostered by the PCI) and the Italian, NATO and U.S. military installations. By the '70s, Sardist claims were widespread with the support of many springing Grassroots organisations;[41] they ranged from supporting of the Sardinian Action Party to having harshly critical views towards it, and were also ideologically diverse: for example, the catholic Unione Democratiga pro s'Indipendentzia de sa Sardigna ("Democratic Union for Sardinian Independence") and the socialist Liga de Unidade Nazionale pro s'Indipendentzia de sa Sardigna e su Socialismu ("League of National Union for Sardinian Independence and Socialism"), competing with each other based on their beliefs, were both founded in 1967.[42] Some cultural circles, like Città-Campagna and Su Populu Sardu, also drew militants from the extra-parliamentary groups based on the island, and saw many Sardinian university students joining in.[42] The youth wings in the town of Orgosolo were particularly active against land dispossession and the militarization of the grazing lands. In 1978, the movement Sardenya y Llibertat ("Sardinia and Freedom") was founded by Carlo Sechi and Rafael Caria in the city of Alghero.[43]

The Psd'Az experienced another comeback in the 1980s. In the 1984 regional election the party peaked at 30% in Cagliari and over 20% in Sassari and Oristano, gaining overall 13.8% of the vote: therefore, due to its pivotal role in the newly elected Regional Council, Sardist Mario Melis was President of Sardinia from 1984 to 1989,[44] when it managed to get 12.5% of the vote. Ever since, that result has not been repeated yet by the Sardinian Action Party, let alone any of the splinter groups emerging from it.

21st century

The Sardinian nationalist movement is in fact rather disjointed and lacking in unity nowadays:[45] it is composed mostly of several local and scattered grassroots organisations across the island that do not have a clear central policy-making authority, and besides, the different nationalist subgroups often disagree with each other on many key issues.[46] Sardinian nationalists address a number of issues, such as the environmental damage caused by the military forces[47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55] (in fact, 60% of such bases in Italy are located on the island),[56] the financial and economic exploitation of the island's resources by the Italian state and mainland industrialists,[57] the lack of any political representation both in Italy and in the European Parliament[58][59] (due to an unbalanced electoral constituency that still remains to this day,[60] Sardinia has not had its own MEP since 1994),[61] the nuclear power and waste (on which a referendum was proposed by a Sardist party,[62] being held in 2011[63]) and the ongoing process of depopulation and Italianization that would destroy the Sardinian indigenous culture.[64]

Sardinian nationalism is a pacific movement that does not advocate violent revolution, proposing instead to achieve its goals within a liberal democratic framework. However, as an exception to the rule, there had been some issues in the past strictly related to separatist tendencies, the most worth mentioning being essentially three. First, the actions planned in 1968[65] by Giangiacomo Feltrinelli to turn the island into the Cuba of the Mediterranean and "liberate it from colonialism" by making contact with several local nationalist groups;[66][67] in the end, the attempt of the famous communist thinker to strengthen the pro-independence militant lines, divided into the socialist Fronte Nazionale de Liberazione de sa Sardigna (FNLS) and the rightist Movimentu Nazionalista Sardu (MNS),[68] was nullified by the Italian secret military intelligence.[69] Secondly, there had been in the 1980s the question of the so-called "separatist conspiracy", a secret plan apparently set up by some local activists to reach the island's independence in collaboration with Gaddafi's Libya;[70][71][72][73] according to some reconstructions of the facts, the supposed Sardinian separatist conspiracy might have been a machination of the Italian secret services seeking to discredit the rising nationalist wave in the island.[74] There were also separatist militant groups,[75] like the Movimento Armato Sardo (Sardinian Armed Movement[76]), claiming assassinations and several kidnappings.[77][78][79][80][81] Finally, it should be mentioned the case of a number of bombings,[75][82][83] the most notable of which being that in 2004 against Silvio Berlusconi in his visit to Porto Rotondo (Olbia) with Tony Blair;[84] the responsibility has been apparently claimed by some unknown anarcho-separatist militant groups,[80][85][86] the presence of which has not been seen again.[87]

In 2012, a vote in the Sardinian Assembly to pass an independence referendum bill failed by one vote.[88]

In 2017, a Sardinian independence campaigner going by the name of Salvatore (Doddore in Sardinian) Meloni died after a two-month hunger and thirst strike while imprisoned at Uta.[89][90][91][92][93]

Popularity

In the 1970s, around 38% of the Sardinian population expressed a favourable view on independence.[94] In 1984, another poll made by the second most widespread Sardinian newspaper La Nuova Sardegna also reported frustrations with the Italian central government in Sardinia, with the regionalist opinion being split across a spectrum ranging from calls for more autonomy in Italy to total independence from Italy.[95] According to a 2012 survey conducted in a joint effort between the University of Cagliari and that of Edinburgh,[96][97][98] 41% of Sardinians would be in favour of independence (with 10% choosing it from both Italy and the European Union, and 31% only from Italy with Sardinia remaining in the EU), whilst another 46% would rather have a larger autonomy within Italy and the EU, including fiscal power; 12% of people would be content to remain part of Italy and the EU with a Regional Council without any fiscal powers, and 1% in Italy and the EU without a Regional Council and fiscal powers.[99][100][101][102][103][104][105]

Besides, the same survey reported a Moreno question giving the following results: (1) Sardinian, not Italian, 26%; (2) more Sardinian than Italian, 37%; (3) equally Sardinian and Italian, 31%; (4) more Italian than Sardinian, 5%; (5) Italian, not Sardinian, 1%.[101][106][107] A 2017 poll by the Ixè Institute found that 51% of those questioned identified as Sardinian (as opposed to an Italian average of 15% identifying by their region of origin), rather than Italian (19%), European (11%) and/or citizen of the world (19%).[108][109]

All these numerical data have been exposed by researchers like Carlo Pala, a political scientist at the University of Sassari.[110] Even other polls, published by professional organizations for public opinion research, contribute to corroborating, to a varying degree, these findings and their accuracy.[111]

However, this support has heretofore failed to translate into electoral success for pro-sovereignty Sardinian forces and a vigorous political action.[2][112] In fact, this strong sense of regional identity does not seem to benefit any regional party at all, as it is also combined with lack of political engagement and a general distrust in institutions and parties, including those putting emphasis on Sardinian identity;[101] moreover, the nationalist movement has a well-documented history of fractionalization:[45][113] all attempts to unify the nationalist subgroups have so far failed; thus, the Sardist movement still suffers from being highly fragmented into a large number of political subgroups pushing different policies. All the Sardist parties put together usually win around 10–20% of the vote in regional elections, with not a single one managing to emerge as a serious competitor to the statewide parties. Such disconnect between societal views and political capitalization is called by some scholars, like Pala, the "disorganic connection of the regionalist actors" (connessione disorganica degli attori regionalisti).

Unlike other European regions with nationalist tendencies, even the local branches of statewide parties have incorporated regionalist elements in their political agenda,[114] thus undermining the once distinctive Sardist demands:[29][115] it is to be mentioned, for example, Francesco Cossiga's constitutional bill n. 352 to reform the Sardinian Statute, which ended up being eventually rejected by the Italian Parliament and aimed to recognize the island as a distinct nation within Italy, and to grant it the right to self-determination.[116][117] The nationalist parties have disjointedly responded to the long-term accommodation strategy promoted by the statewide ones: some refused to team up, while others tried to work with the pro-Italian parties as coalition partners, in the hopes of applying further pressure from within to favour increased devolution; either choice has been met with diffidence by the Sardinian electorate, leading the various Sardist parties to play a marginal role in Sardinian politics.

In the 2014 regional election, for instance, more than a dozen Sardist parties of different connotations took part to the electoral competition, but yet again, because of their number and political fragmentation,[7][118][119][120] they did not manage to win as many seats as they were initially supposed to, some[121] think even because of a tactical mistake by the ProgReS-sponsored list, which was then led by the novelist Michela Murgia.[122][123][124] Despite the combined result of all of the nationalist parties being around 26%, as estimated by La Nuova Sardegna[7][125] (dropping to 18% for the pro-independence forces[126]), they won only eight seats in the Sardinian regional council.[127][128][129][130]

In February 2019 the secretary of the separatist Sardinian Action Party was elected President of the Autonomous Region with 47.82% of votes.

Party support

Here is a summary of the results of the regionalist parties participating in the regional elections and promoting stances ranging from increased autonomy to independence:

1949 party support
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1953 party support
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1957 party support
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1961 party support
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1965 party support
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1969 party support
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1974 party support
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1979 party support
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1984 party support
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1989 party support
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1994 party support
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1999 party support
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2004 party support
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2009 party support
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2014 party support
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2019 party support
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2024 party support
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See also


References

  1. Pala, C. 2015. Sardinia. The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism. 1–3. Abstract
  2. Hechter (M.), The Dynamics of Secession, Acta Sociologica, vol. 35, 1992, p. 267.
  3. <<Vittorio Amedeo accettò a malincuore, e dopo ripetute proteste, nel 1720, da governi stranieri, al solito, la Sardegna in cambio della Sicilia. E diresti che la ripugnanza con la quale egli accettò la terra in dominio, si perpetuasse, aumentando, attraverso la dinastia.>> Giuseppe Mazzini, La Sardegna, Editore Il Nuraghe, Cagliari, pp.9
  4. <<Il principe savoiardo Amedeo II avrebbe preferito un trattamento migliore dai suoi alleati, ma questi sommessamente ma efficacemente, gli fecero probabilmente capire che sarebbe potuto rimanere con nulla in mano, mentre il nuovo possedimento gli avrebbe consentito di fregiarsi comunque del titolo di re, essendo quello un regno plurisecolare.>> Giuseppi dei Nur, Buongiorno Sardegna – Da dove veniamo, Cagliari, 2013, La Biblioteca dell'Identità, pp.9
  5. <<Ancora nel 1784 Vittorio Amedeo III, attraverso i segreti canali della diplomazia, aveva offerto l'isola all'Austria di Giuseppe II in cambio di adeguati compensi in Lombardia.>> Carlino Sole, La Sardegna sabauda nel Settecento, Editore Chiarella, Sassari, 1984, pp.176
  6. La terza Irlanda. Gli scritti sulla Sardegna di Carlo Cattaneo e Giuseppe Mazzini, Condaghes, Cagliari 1995, pp. 166–169.
  7. Onnis, Omar. La Sardegna e i sardi nel tempo, Arkadia, pp.174
  8. <<Lo stato sabaudo invaso dalle armate napoleoniche era in pieno disfacimento e lo stesso Vittorio Amedeo III, nelle trattative di pace col Direttorio, aveva espressamente dato facoltà ai suoi plenipotenziari di cedere alla Francia l'isola di Sardegna, pur di mantenere i suoi possessi di terraferma e di ingrandirli eventualmente con altri territori della pianura padana sottratti agli austriaci.>> Carlino Sole, La Sardegna sabauda nel Settecento, Editore Chiarella, Sassari, 1984, pp.245
  9. Idee di Sardegna, Carlo Pala, Carocci Editore, 2016, pp.77
  10. Onnis, Omar (2015). La Sardegna e i sardi nel tempo, Arkadia, Cagliari, p.172
  11. Martini, Pietro. Sull’unione civile della Sardegna colla Liguria, col Piemonte e colla Savoia, Cagliari, Timon, 1847, p.4
  12. Giangiacomo Ortu (2019). "Emilio Lussu, l'autonomia come valore morale". La Nuova Sardegna.
  13. Un arxipèlag invisible: la relació impossible de Sardenya i Còrsega sota nacionalismes, segles XVIII-XX – Marcel Farinelli, Universitat Pompeu Fabra. Institut Universitari d'Història Jaume Vicens i Vives, pp.299–300
  14. Francesco Cesare Casula, Breve Storia di Sardegna, p. 245; op. cit.
  15. Onnis, Omar (2015). La Sardegna e i sardi nel tempo, Arkadia, Cagliari, p.173
  16. M. Brigaglia, La Sardegna nel ventennio fascista, p. 317
  17. Glossario di autonomia Sardo-Italiana, Francesco Cesare Casùla, Presentazione del 2007 di Francesco Cossiga
  18. Birgit Wagner (2011), La questione sarda. La sfida dell’alterità in Il postcoloniale in Italia, Aut Aut n. 349
  19. Elias (A.) et Tronconi (F.), From protest to power. Autonomist parties and the challenges of representation, Vienna, Braumüller, 2011
  20. Hepburn, Eve. The Ideological Polarisation and Depolarisation of Sardinian Nationalism, Regional and Federal Studies Vol. 19, No.5. (2010)
  21. Francesco Casula (2015). "Federalismo e pacifismo: il messaggio di Lussu". Il Manifesto sardo.
  22. Cardia, Mariarosa (1992). La nascita della regione autonoma della Sardegna, Franco Angeli
  23. Manlio Brigaglia, Michelangelo Pira, Giuseppe Contini and Girolamo Sotgiu, Trent'anni di autonomia per la Sardegna , in Vindice Ribichesu (edited by), Supplemento al n. 1, gennaio 1978, di Sardegna Autonomia, Consiglio Regionale della Sardegna. Comitato per il XXX dell'Autonomia, Sassari, Gallizzi, 1978
  24. "Una Sardegna di cittadini e non di sudditi" (from "Storia dell’Autonomia sarda 1847–2018", edited by Manlio Brigaglia and Salvatore Mura, Delfino.
  25. Pala, Carlo (2016). Idee di Sardegna, Carocci Editore, pp.118
  26. Pintore, Gianfranco (1996). La sovrana e la cameriera: La Sardegna tra sovranità e dipendenza. Nuoro: Insula, 13
  27. Art.13, Statuto speciale per la Sardegna: Lo Stato col concorso della Regione dispone un piano organico per favorire la rinascita economica e sociale dell'Isola.
  28. Statuto Sardo commentato, Regione Autonoma della Sardegna, 1998, Arti Grafiche Pisano
  29. Cultura e identitade – Sardinna, ghennalzu – aprile 2002
  30. <<In chiave antimilitarista, nel quadro del tradizionale attivismo contestativo contro la presenza di strutture militari sul territorio nazionale, a fronte del tono minore che ha caratterizzato l’impegno dei comitati siciliani contro il sistema satellitare MUOS, si è rilevato un innalzamento della tensione mobilitativa in Sardegna, ove espressioni dell’antagonismo e dell’indipendentismo sardo hanno rivitalizzato la protesta contro le esercitazioni nei poligoni e nelle installazioni militari dell’Isola, reclamando la smilitarizzazione del territorio.>> Relazione sulla politica dell'informazione per la sicurezza, pg.69
  31. Mattu, Katjuscia. Internal colonialism in Western Europe: the case of Sardinia
  32. Eve Hepburn, New Challenges for Stateless Nationalist and Regionalist Parties, Routledge, 2010, pp.121
  33. Minahan, James. Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S-Z, pg. 1664
  34. Cabitza, Giuliano. Sardegna: rivolta contro la colonizzazione. Milano, Feltrinelli Editore.
  35. Cultura e identitade – Sardinna, January – April 2002
  36. Vittorfranco Pisano, The Dynamics of Subversion and Violence in Contemporary Italy, Hoover Institution Press (1987), p.143
  37. Paola Sirigu, Il codice barbaricino, La Riflessione (Davide Zedda Editore), 2007, pp.225–234
  38. "Sardinia, a political laboratory". GNOSIS, Italian Intelligence Magazine.
  39. Shao Chuan Leng, Coping with Crises: How Governments Deal with Emergencies, University Press of America
  40. Giovanni Ricci, Sardegna Criminale, Newton Compton, 2008
  41. Criminologia del terrorismo anarco-insurrezionalista, Marco Boschi, pag.63
  42. "Bomb found near Berlusconi villa after Blair visit". The Guardian. 18 August 2004. Archived from the original on 23 October 2021.
  43. Pintore (G.), Sardegna, regione o colonia?, Milano, Mazzotta, 1974
  44. Gianmario Demuro; Ilenia Ruggiu; Francesco Mola (2013). Identità e Autonomia in Sardegna e Scozia. Maggioli Editore. pp. 35–39. ISBN 978-8838782435.
  45. Gianmario Demuro; Ilenia Ruggiu; Francesco Mola (2013). Identità e Autonomia in Sardegna e Scozia. Maggioli Editore. pp. 26–28. ISBN 978-8838782435.
  46. L'esempio della Catalogna, i sardi sono più «identitari» - L'Unione Sarda; Sardi, i più «identitari», di Giuseppe Meloni; L’UNIONE SARDA, Fondazione Sardinia, 30 September 2015
  47. La Sardegna: lo stato delle cose fra “percepito” e ossatura reale, Istituto Ixè, Fondazione di Sardegna; Vissuto – identità, table n. 44
  48. Il cuore identitario dei sardi non-ha ancora peso elettorale, L’Unione Sarda, Alessandro Ledda, 22 August 2016
  49. Pala, Carlo (2016). Idee di Sardegna. Autonomisti, sovranisti, indipendentisti oggi, Carocci editore, pp.152–156
  50. Lluch, Jaime. Constitutionalism and the Politics of Accommodation in Multinational Democracies
  51. David Forniès (14 January 2014). "Sardinian independence must be the final outcome of a process of building a lot of freedoms". Nationalia. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  52. Parties like "Sardinian Reformers" and "The Base Sardinia" are federalist rather than outright separatist.

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