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	<title type='text'>Denise Milizia Website</title>
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		<name>Denise Milizia Website</name>
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	<updated>2026-04-19T08:29:04+01:00</updated>
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		<id>http://www.denisemilizia.com/public/post/100-anni-uniba-358.asp</id>
		<updated>2024-12-13T15:46:25+01:00</updated>
		<title type='text'><![CDATA[100 anni uniba]]></title>
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	100 years uniba</p>
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			<name>Denise Milizia</name>
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	<entry>
		<id>http://www.denisemilizia.com/public/post/we-re-leaving-the-european-union-but-we-re-not-leaving-europe-332.asp</id>
		<updated>2020-12-01T16:38:31+01:00</updated>
		<title type='text'><![CDATA["We're leaving the European Union but we're not leaving Europe"]]></title>
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	The cake and cherry approach to the European Union.</p>
<p>
	&nbsp;</p>
<p>
	M.A. students of International Relations and Administartive Science record their reading of the British attitude towards the EU</p>
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		<author>
			<name>Denise Milizia</name>
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	<entry>
		<id>http://www.denisemilizia.com/public/post/happy-new-year-books-books-and-books-56.asp</id>
		<updated>2011-12-31T16:53:08+01:00</updated>
		<title type='text'><![CDATA[Happy New Year  - books books and books]]></title>
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			<name>Denise Milizia</name>
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	<entry>
		<id>http://www.denisemilizia.com/public/post/ipa-international-phonetic-alphabet-41.asp</id>
		<updated>2011-06-04T11:19:25+01:00</updated>
		<title type='text'><![CDATA[IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet)]]></title>
		<content type='html'><![CDATA[<span><img src="/public/file/phonetic_alphabet.gif" class="img-right" /></span><p>
	File 5 of the programme, Mispronounced Words, has been updated.</p>
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			<name>Denise Milizia</name>
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	<entry>
		<id>http://www.denisemilizia.com/public/post/david-cameron-and-europe-14.asp</id>
		<updated>2011-03-21T23:49:15+01:00</updated>
		<title type='text'><![CDATA[David Cameron and Europe]]></title>
		<content type='html'><![CDATA[<p>
	<span><img alt="cameron" class="img-left" src="/public/file/davidcameron.jpg" /></span></p>
<p>
	Europe: it&#39;s back<br />
	David Cameron&rsquo;s strategy for avoiding EU trouble falls foul of events</p>
<p>
	&nbsp;</p>
<p>
	BRITAIN is not about to walk out of the European Union. Opponents of EU integration may dream, but&mdash;in the near or medium term&mdash;no British government will risk a withdrawal in cold blood, in hopes of securing cut-price associate membership.</p>
<p>
	Yet there is a non-trivial chance that Britain might fall out of the EU one day. Such a falling-out would involve a hasty withdrawal from a Europe that had taken an impossibly unpalatable turn. The chances of such a messy crisis are rising. Should Britain end up out of the union, some years hence, historians may look back at two events of the present: a European Union bill currently before Parliament, and Brussels summits planned for March 11th.</p>
<p>
	Britain&rsquo;s new European bill requires a referendum on any new treaty that would transfer powers from Britain to the EU. Ministers have given themselves some wriggle room&mdash;governments always do&mdash;but not that much. Because almost any European referendum would be lost in Britain (apart, perhaps, from an in-or-out vote), the effect is to bolt Britain firmly to the union&rsquo;s legal status quo. Yet at the same time, thanks to the existential crisis facing the single currency, Europe&rsquo;s tectonic plates are in motion.</p>
<p>
	Ask David Cameron how sustainable his strategy feels. His timetable for March 11th goes like this: a morning summit for all 27 EU leaders, enduring the worst sort of footling Brussels misery: a windy address from the boss of the European Parliament, a &ldquo;family photo&rdquo; with colleagues, then a working lunch to debate the tumult in north Africa (expect unimportant conclusions about this important subject). After press conferences, Britain&rsquo;s prime minister will head for home, leaving his 17 euro-zone colleagues to hold a serious, substantive discussion about economic co-ordination within a &ldquo;pact for the euro&rdquo; (see Charlemagne).</p>
<p>
	In 2008, when a first summit reserved for euro-zone leaders was called by the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, it was termed an emergency and Britain&rsquo;s then prime minister, Gordon Brown, was allowed to attend, exceptionally. To soothe the uninvited, a second and third were presented as ad-hoc responses to market turmoil. This being the fourth euro-zone summit, however, it is starting to look like a habit. That is a victory for the French, and a concession by Germany. France has long wanted more decisions taken by the euro zone, which is smaller and excludes some loud voices for free-market liberalism, such as Britain and several Nordic and ex-communist countries. For the same reasons Germany (which likes to cast a deciding vote between free-market and statist arguments) wanted Britain in the room. But shortly after he came to power, Mr Cameron told Germany&rsquo;s chancellor, Angela Merkel, that Britain would stand aloof from deeper integration aimed at shoring up the euro. That was at once a perfectly rational reading of British domestic politics, and a decision that pushed Germany into the arms of the French.</p>
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