Desarrollo y destrucción del sistema liberal de prisiones. De la Restauración a la Guerra Civil

During the "Restoration" and the "Second Republic", up until the outbreak of the Civil War, Spain experienced the development of a prison system that was markedly liberal in nature. This system would begin gaining robustness and institutional credibility from the first decade of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gargallo Vaamonde, Luis
Other Authors: Oliver Olmo, Pedro (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha)
Format: text (thesis)
Language:spa
Published: Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha (España) 2015
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Online Access:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaites?codigo=44516
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Summary:During the "Restoration" and the "Second Republic", up until the outbreak of the Civil War, Spain experienced the development of a prison system that was markedly liberal in nature. This system would begin gaining robustness and institutional credibility from the first decade of the 20th Century, peaking in the early years of the Second Republic government. Thus, a penitentiary system was established that was based on the values of the greatly-predominant liberalism. That liberal belief system espoused the defence of social harmony, of property and of the individual, and penal practices were constructed on the basis of those principles. After that, the Civil War and the warlike culture that came along with it altered the prison system, forming it into an instrument in the service of the conflict, thereby wiping out the liberal agenda that had been nurtured since the mid-19th Century.