This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this record.Situated in relation to on-going critical discussion of the theory and practice of the rule of law in historical perspective, this article undertakes a comparative analysis of the offences of vilification of the State in the 1930 Italian Penal Code and the crime of seditious libel in English common law during the interwar period. It argues that there were important commonalities in the scope and objectives of these offences, which indicate that the apparently divergent legal systems of Fascist Italy and democratic Britain shared a similar approach to the conception and protection of State interests and their relatio...
The fiftieth anniversary of Hitler's rise to power became an occasion for the authors of the articl...
This doctoral dissertation examines the various ways in which intellectuals, writers, politicians, j...
Responses to the deliberately provocative title are contextualised within this writer’s research fin...
Author's draft. Final version Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011. Available online at http:...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The aim of this chapter is to offer a critical analysis of the uses of criminal law in the context o...
The aim of this article is to problematize one of the most audacious tenets of the new consensus, na...
This paper highlights some of the legal responses to political extremism in the 1930s and the modern...
In this essay I endeavour to understand what kind of connection may be established between poli...
In western liberal countries late modernity brings in its wake certain distinctive patterns of crime...
Defence date: 6 June 2007Examining Board: Prof. Peter Becker, European University Institute (EUI) ; ...
The proposed chapter aims to further the engagement with the past by bringing to the fore the legal ...
The article examines the Special Tribunal for the Defense of the State\u27s use of the no grounds t...
Subverting the Settled Order of Things : Sedition and Crimes against the State A Nathanson Legal His...
This dissertation theorizes the political productivity of notions of universal crime as they circula...
The fiftieth anniversary of Hitler's rise to power became an occasion for the authors of the articl...
This doctoral dissertation examines the various ways in which intellectuals, writers, politicians, j...
Responses to the deliberately provocative title are contextualised within this writer’s research fin...
Author's draft. Final version Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011. Available online at http:...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
The aim of this chapter is to offer a critical analysis of the uses of criminal law in the context o...
The aim of this article is to problematize one of the most audacious tenets of the new consensus, na...
This paper highlights some of the legal responses to political extremism in the 1930s and the modern...
In this essay I endeavour to understand what kind of connection may be established between poli...
In western liberal countries late modernity brings in its wake certain distinctive patterns of crime...
Defence date: 6 June 2007Examining Board: Prof. Peter Becker, European University Institute (EUI) ; ...
The proposed chapter aims to further the engagement with the past by bringing to the fore the legal ...
The article examines the Special Tribunal for the Defense of the State\u27s use of the no grounds t...
Subverting the Settled Order of Things : Sedition and Crimes against the State A Nathanson Legal His...
This dissertation theorizes the political productivity of notions of universal crime as they circula...
The fiftieth anniversary of Hitler's rise to power became an occasion for the authors of the articl...
This doctoral dissertation examines the various ways in which intellectuals, writers, politicians, j...
Responses to the deliberately provocative title are contextualised within this writer’s research fin...