Available Formats
Fascism and Criminal Law: History, Theory, Continuity
By (Author) Dr Stephen Skinner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
15th January 2015
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Comparative law
Legal history
Far-right political ideologies and movements
345.00904
Hardback
234
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 15mm
512g
Fascism was one of the twentieth centurys principal political forces, and one of the most violent and problematic. Brutal, repressive and in some cases totalitarian, the fascist and authoritarian regimes of the early twentieth century, in Europe and beyond, sought to create revolutionary new orders that crushed their opponents. A central component of such regimes' exertion of control was criminal law, a focal point and key instrument of State punitive and repressive power. This collection brings together a range of original essays by international experts in the field to explore questions of criminal law under Italian Fascism and other similar regimes, including Franco's Spain, Vargas's Brazil and interwar Romania and Japan. Addressing issues of substantive criminal law, criminology and ideology, the form and function of criminal justice institutions, and the role and perception of criminal law in processes of transition, the collection casts new light on fascism's criminal legal history and related questions of theoretical interpretation and historiography. At the heart of the collection is the problematic issue of continuity and similarity among fascist systems and preceding, contemporaneous and subsequent legal orders, an issue that goes to the heart of fascist regimes' historical identity and the complex relationship between them and the legal orders constructed in their aftermath. The collection thus makes an innovative contribution both to the comparative understanding of fascism, and to critical engagement with the foundations and modalities of criminal law across systems.
This collection of essays addresses different aspects of criminal law in some of the political regimes that took power after the First World War, loosely referred to as as 'fascist' -- Tiago Pires Marquez * British Journal of Criminology Advance Access *
Stephen Skinner is a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Exeter.