España, "última colonia de sí misma": La justicia en el exilio. (original) (raw)

2011, L'exil espagnol dans les Amériques

This article presents ongoing research around the trial of the fascist leader and founder of Falange, José Antonio Primo de Rivera at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. The unpublished memoirs of the investigative judge, Federico Enjuto Ferrán, cited here for the first time, will cast new light into the plans of the second Spanish republic to exercise the rule of law in a context of a complex Civil War. A central objective here was to offer Primo de Rivera and other instigators of the coup, judicial guarantees and safewards in the face of political assassinations and summary executions. This momentum and the legacy of a reformed, popular justice system was however obscured by Francoist propaganda which denied the legitimacy of all republican institutions.

"VEK FASHIZMA V ISPANII (1918-2014)" [UN SIGLO DE FASCISMO EN ESPAÑA, 1918-2014]

The history of fascism in Spain tends to be presented in a standard chronological pattern, that begins in 1933 with the creation of the Falange Española party, and follows with its subsequent development during the Civil War (1936-1939), and under the dictatorship of general general Francisco Franco (1939-1975). This study offers a different perspective, beginning in 1919, with the appearance of the first fascist organization in Barcelona, and ends with an analysis of the legacy of fascism in today's extreme right.

Fundamental Laws of Fascist Spain

Translated by J. B. Owens, Ph.D., Professor of History, Idaho State University Because I have noted increased attention to the history of European fascist movements, I thought that there might be some interest in having available in English translation the key documents of the Spanish fascist government under the leadership of Francisco Franco. I claim no great originality or literary quality for this translation, which I prepared for students in my course “Constituting Modern Spain, 1808-1982”. This course was designed as a comparative, world history course in which we studied attempts to create countries on the basis of written constitutions.

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