Abstract
The challenging multi-year planning provided by the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) requires not only a revolution in the management of decision-making processes, but also a renewed attention to the acts necessary to put those processes into effect and to their quality and impact in the legal system. Thus, the issue of the quality of legislation becomes central. The paper analyses this issue in terms of its implications within the PNRR itself, also prospecting how the required paradigm shift, in order to implement the PNRR measures, could affect the form of government.
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