JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
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Vol. 7, Nº. 2 (November 2016-April 2017), pp. 64-89
On the constitutional order in/of Italian fascism
Pedro Velez
implemented, although the corporate reform had not come to be fully actuated
. The
corporate project would generate lively debate on fascist "public and political space" – a
debate whose fault lines did not fail to reveal a shared basic assumption: the functionality
of the corporate project for (objective and subjective) "production" of the political
community. In the guidance of Rocco, the corporate project appeared to be understood
in an "imperial", "bureaucratic” and “centralist" sense as a reconstruction technique in
complex times of society, and the re-emergence of groups of a fully sovereign State that
could integrate and unify, from top to bottom, the "social magma" so that the "political"
coincides (or returns to coincide) with the "State", which is an imperial scheme of the
political community for society itself
. They could also crystallise nuanced centralist
guidelines in which the state - whose reconstruction, strengthening and power increase
continued to be the main goal – arising from the structure of societal institutions, from
whose intrinsic relatively autonomous dynamism, the state political process would
receive a minimally influential impulse – from the bottom up. In the doctrinaire record of
Giuseppe Bottai, one of the great architects of the Fascist State, corporatism was
conceived as a means of restructuring the State and controlling social magma, but was
also a scheme of self-government of the economy. Corporatism was presented as a
system eminently governed by a "bottom up" logic, but a system of realities based on
the community, of learning places of a civil-community form – proprietary corporations
(Ugo Spirito) and large public limited companies (Volpicelli)
. A register of control by
the State apparatus, maxime of the management centre of State life, training, internal
life, and normative will of the institutions of the corporate-union, planning would prevail.
The Fascist State was structured "corporately" but "society" could still express itself in
terms of a minimal influence, with corporatism being intrinsically a final dimension of
recognition of a certain irreducible social pluralism
.
In another politico-constitutional transformation, the National Fascist Party (NFP) and
the State would be institutionally jointed. Decree No. 2693 of 9th December 1928 would
According to Mussolini (14th November 1933): “to apply full, complete, integral and revolutionary
corporatism, three conditions must occur: A single party, to allow the action of political discipline along with
the action of economic discipline, which is above the interests at stake, and that is a bond that unites all in
the same faith. This however is not enough. In addition to the one-party, a totalitarian State is necessary,
i.e. a State that transforms and strengthens all energies, all interests, all the hopes of a people. But still
this is not enough. Third, the final and most important condition: we must live an ideal period of high
tension, like the one we are currently experiencing” – Benito Mussolini, O Estado Corporativo, Vallecchi
Editore, Firenze, 1938, pp. 34-35.
In a sector of the fascist publicística, there was even a project "of corporatism without corporations", an
ordering scheme in which the State was conceived as an integral and supreme corporation and
"corporations" as mere state bodies of magma formatting social. Toraldo M. di Francia, Per un corporatism
senza corporazione: "Lo Stato" di Carlo Costamagna, in Quaderni fiorentini XVIII, Giuffrè Editore, Milan,
1989, pp. 267-327.
On the subject of corporatism(s) in fascism see: Gianpasquale Santomassimo, La terza via fascist: il mito
del corporatism, Carocci editore, Rome, 2006; Lorenzo Ornaghi, Stato and Corporazione, Storia di una
dottrina nella crisi sistema politico contemporaneo, Giuffrè Editore, Milano, 1984; Bernardo Sordi ,
Corporativismo e dottrina dello stato in Italia: incidenze costituzionali e amministrative in Aldo Mazzacane
/ Alessandro / Sum Michael Stolleis (eds.), Korporativismus in den südeuropäischen Diktaturen / Il
corporatism nelle dittature sudeuropee, Das Europa der Diktatur 6 Vittorio Klostermann, Frankfurt am Main,
2005, pp. 129-145; Paolo Grossi, Scienza Italian giuridica. Un profilo storico 1860-1950, Giuffrè, Milano,
2000, p. 171 ff; cfr. furthermore A. Aquarone, op. cit., Pp. 122 ff. vide Pietro Costa, Lo 'Stato Totalitarian':
un field semantic nella giuspubblicistica del Fascism Cit.
See Sabino Cassese, Lo Stato fascist, Il Mulino, Bologna 2010. The desired unification of the social would
be operated via ad hoc institutional arrangements and with the outline of the creation of a "managerial"
social state. vide: S. Lupo, Il fascism: La politica in un regime totalitario, Donzelli Editore, Rome Editore,
2000; Maria Sophia Quine, Italy's Social Revolution: Charity and Welfare from Liberalism to Fascism,
Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills/New York, 2002; Guido Melis, Fascismo (ordinamento costituzionale), in
Digesto delle Discipline Pubblicistiche, vol. VI , Reprinting, Turin, 1999 (1st ed. 1991), pp. 259-273.