“…A substantial body of research has focused on the elements of continuity and change of IFP. Drawing on neo-realist and constructivist approaches to international relations, a vast majority of scholars (with only a few exceptions, e.g., Brighi 2007;Quaglia 2007) argue for a certain stability in foreign policy (Attinà 1991;Ignazi, Giacomello, and Coticchia 2012), demonstrated by the persistent commitment of both ruling and opposition parties to the three pillars (or circles) of IFP: the Atlantic Alliance, the European integration process and the Mediterranean partnership (e.g., Zannoni 1997). Since the World War II, Italy's foreign policy has been conceived, within these interdependent pillars (Andreatta and Hill 1997;Carbone 2007), as defensive and low-profile multilateralism.…”