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
Fascism and Criminal Law, ‘One of the Greatest Attributes of Sovereignty’
Stephen Skinner
I Criminal Law and Italian Fascism
1 The Shadow of the Law: the Special Tribunal for the Defence of the State between Justice and Politics in the Italian Fascist Period
Luigi Lacchè
2 The Positivist School of Criminology and Italian Fascist Criminal Law: a Squandered Legacy?
Emilia Musumeci
3 Fascist by Name, Fascist by Nature? The 1930 Italian Penal Code in Academic Commentary, 1928–46
Stephen Skinner
4 Criminal Law, Racial Law, Fascist Law: Was the Fascist Era Really a ‘Parenthesis’ for the Italian Legal System?
Michael A Livingston
II Criminal Law, Fascism and Authoritarianism in Romania, Spain, Brazil and
Japan
5 The Enemy Within: Criminal Law and Ideology in Interwar Romania
Cosmin S Cercel
6 Criminal Law under the Francoist Regime: the Influence of Militarism and National-Catholicism
Pascual Marzal
7 When Law and Prerogatives Blend: Generic Fascism in Getulio Vargas’s Brazil, 1930–45
Elizabeth Cancelli
8 Facilitating Fascism? The Japanese Peace Preservation Act and the Role of the Judiciary
Hiromi Sasamoto-Collins
Conclusion: Repression and Legality
Stephen Skinner
Afterword
Through the Looking Glass: Thinking About and Working Through Fascist Criminal Law
David Fraser