Fabrizio Coticchia is Research Fellow at the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna (Pisa). He obtained a PhD in Political Systems and Institutional Change at the IMT (Lucca Institute for Advanced Studies). His fields of research are contemporary warfare, strategic culture, public opinion and military operations, Italian and European defence policy, development cooperation. He holds postgraduate courses on geopolitics, theories of international relations and security studies. Francesco N. Moro is a Research Fellow at the University of Milan-Bicocca. His research focuses on defence and national security policies, regular and irregular armed groups, organized crime and collective violence. He has taught/conducted research at the University of Florence, MIT's Center for International Studies, Johns Hopkins University Bologna Center, and at The Institute of Military Aeronautical Sciences of the Italian Air Force.
'With unprecedented access to military officials and documents, the authors have compiled a thorough analysis of the early 21st century transformation of the Italian armed forces - one unlikely to be surpassed. It details changes in military strategy and budgets and provides accounts of major Italian military operations, from Afghanistan to Libya. Particularly valuable are the comparative dimension - with well-researched discussions of the French and British experiences - and a theoretical framework that highlights learning, innovation, and institutional change.' Matthew Evangelista, Cornell University, USA 'Over the last two decades, the Italian armed forces have been heavily involved in multiple missions abroad and yet continue to suffer from domestic indifference and scholarly neglect. Therefore, this insightful volume provides a much needed contribution to the study of defence transformation. From doctrine to budget, from operational experiences to force structure, Fabrizio Coticchia and Francesco Moro lead us in an engaging way through the complexity of Italian defence policy reform, drawing on multiple fresh empirical sources. They provide a nuanced and perceptive analysis and argue that mission requirements and operational experiences triggered multiple layers of change with profound implications. Based on a stimulating comparison with the United Kingdom and France, this is an important addition to the scholarly literature on contemporary Western war-making.' Pascal Vennesson, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 'Overall, the book is well structured, comprehensible and certainly succeeds in opening the black box of change... The volume is suited for an audience that already has a background in IR or Strategic Studies or is familiar with defence studies and wants to gain deeper insight into contemporary military organisations and their recent transformations.'--Karolina Muti, University of Bologna, The International Spectator