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3 Oppression and consensus-building

Policing communities in fascist Italy
  • Jonathan Dunnage
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Mussolini’s policemen
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Mussolini’s policemen

Abstract

Partly based on a detailed case study of the province and city of Siena, this chapter examines the function and activities of members of the regular forces of Benito Mussolini's police in Italian communities. As well as considering the impact of the dictatorship on the working lives of police personnel, the chapter analyses how fascism determined their relationship with the public. Many of the daily activities which the police undertook during the fascist period were barely different to those of the liberal era. In liberal Italy, police officers and officials had spent a good part of their energies controlling mass political and labour movements. The policing of communities during the fascist period, though often highly oppressive, should be considered in the broader context of the regime's desire to generate consensus, particularly among the most disaffected.

Abstract

Partly based on a detailed case study of the province and city of Siena, this chapter examines the function and activities of members of the regular forces of Benito Mussolini's police in Italian communities. As well as considering the impact of the dictatorship on the working lives of police personnel, the chapter analyses how fascism determined their relationship with the public. Many of the daily activities which the police undertook during the fascist period were barely different to those of the liberal era. In liberal Italy, police officers and officials had spent a good part of their energies controlling mass political and labour movements. The policing of communities during the fascist period, though often highly oppressive, should be considered in the broader context of the regime's desire to generate consensus, particularly among the most disaffected.

Heruntergeladen am 22.1.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7765/9781526129932.00008/html
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