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Crime, Disorder, and the Risorgimento

Crime, Disorder, and the Risorgimento

Crime, Disorder, and the Risorgimento

The Politics of Policing in Bologna
Author:
Steven C. Hughes
Published:
July 2002
Availability:
Available
Format:
Paperback
ISBN:
9780521893817

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    This book provides a meticulous examination of the ideology, structure, and functions of the papal police as they operated in the city and province of Bologna in the period before Italian unity, and in doing so offers an important new interpretation of the Risorgimento. The author argues that after the Restoration the new police soon found themselves incapable of dealing effectively with overwhelming problems of crime and public order. In allowing Bologna's elites to arm themselves in posse-style "citizen patrols" on two occasions, the papal government had opened the doors to reform and, eventually, revolution.

    • A contribution to our understanding of the pre-history and causes of the Italian Risorgimento
    • Studies crime, disorder and policing in a single city/area in order to show how these can affect politics and social and political control

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Hughes's work constitutes an important contribution to understanding the process of formation and consolidation of the modern police force..." Journal of Modern History

    "...he expands our knowledge of the politics of policing in the nineteenth century and lends empirical support to John Davis' argument about the extent to which the relationship between politics and policing was a casual factor in the making of a united Italy....a welcome contribution beyond the series in which it appears..." Italian Politics and Society

    At no point does the wealth of archival material he mined, or his close examination of the style and fluctuating intensity of Bolognese crime and disorder, obscure the core theses he presents....the work is finely written and the chapter-ending conclusions are models of clarity. This monograph demonstrates the need for similar regional studies." The Catholic Historical Review

    "This well-researched, carefully crafted book makes an important contribution to the historical literature on modern Italy. It will also be read with profit by scholars of comparative nineteenth-century social history and criminology." American Historical Review

    "...the arguments are provocative and cogent ones which will force historians of the Risorgimento to look beyond the political activities of the liberals and radicals, and consider how the failure of governments in the peninsula to address the concerns of public safety was a significant factor in directing elites toward a unitary solution for Italy. Hughes has produced a model study written with verve and persuasiveness which merits a prominent space among the studies emerging on social disorder and criminality in nineteenth-century Europe." Marion S. Miller, Journal of Modern Italian Studies

    See more reviews

    Product details

    July 2002
    Paperback
    9780521893817
    304 pages
    229 × 152 × 17 mm
    0.45kg
    5 b/w illus. 2 maps 2 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. Setting the stage: Bologna, the ancien regime, and Napoleon
    • 2. Consalvi's troops
    • 3. Functions and failures
    • 4. Public order and the revolution of 1831
    • 5. Reform and failure
    • 6. Reform and revolution
    • 7. The search for stability and the turn to Piedmont
    • 8. Epilogue: risorgimento, freedom, and repression
    • 9. Conclusion.
      Author
    • Steven C. Hughes