Santi Romano
Santi Romano | |
---|---|
Born | Palermo, Italy | 31 January 1875
Died | 3 November 1947 Rome, Italy | (aged 72)
Occupation | Professor |
Years active | 1898–1944 |
Board member of |
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Academic background | |
Education | University of Palermo |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Public law, Jurisprudence |
Institutions | Universities of Camerino, Modena, Pisa, Milano, Roma |
Notable ideas |
Santi Romano (31 January 1875 – 3 November 1947) was an Italian public lawyer, who taught administrative law, constitutional law, ecclesiastical law and international law in several Italian universities. He was President of the Council of State from 1928 to 1944 and Senator of the Kingdom from 1934, as well as member of the Lincean Academy.
An exponent of the theory of legal pluralism, Romano made his best-known contribution to jurisprudence with his book The Legal Order (1918). Together with his maestro, Vittorio Emanuele Orlando, Romano is widely regarded as the leading exponent of the Italian school of public law of his time.[2][3]
Romano's relationship with fascism is controversial among scholars.
Life
Santi Romano was born to Salvatore Romano and Carmela Perez in an upper-middle-class family in Palermo.[4] He enrolled at the Faculty of Law in Palermo and, while still a student, began to collaborate with Vittorio Emanuele Orlando's law firm, and with the public law journal founded by Orlando in 1891, the Archivio di diritto pubblico, in which he published his first essay in 1894. He graduated in 1896 under the supervision of Orlando, in 1897 he published his dissertation as a monograph on public rights in the first volume of Orlando's Primo trattato completo di diritto amministrativo italiano ("First Complete Treatise on Italian Administrative Law").[5]
In 1898, Romano obtained the libera docenza in administrative law, and the following year was appointed as non-tenured professor in constitutional law at the University of Camerino, where he remained until 1902. In 1900, he published two monographs on administrative justice, also as parts of Orlando's series, and in 1901 he published The Principles of Administrative Law as well as the essay "The De Facto Establishment of a Constitutional Legal Order and Its Legitimisation."[5]
In 1902, Romano moved to the University of Modena as a non-tenured professor in international law. In 1906 he became full professor of constitutional law at Moderna. In 1909 he moved to the University of Pisa as professor of administrative law. There he delivered his well-known inaugural lecture "The modern state and its crises".[4][6] In 1917–1918, he published the first edition of his most influential contribution to legal theory, The Legal Order.[6] From 1917 to 1921 he was a member of the High Council for Education and from 1923 to 1924 he served as Dean of the Law Faculty of Pisa.
In 1924 Romano moved to the University of Milan, where he served as Dean of the Law Faculty in 1927–1928. In 1924 he was also appointed to the "Commission of the Fifteen" for constitutional reform set up by the Fascist government. In 1926 he became a member of the Diplomatic Litigation Council.[1][6][7] Between 1918 and 1926 he published several handbooks in constitutional law, international law, ecclesiastical law, and colonial law.[6]
In October 1928, Romano joined the Fascist party and in the same year was appointed as President of the Consiglio di Stato, the Italian administrative high court.[7] He resigned as a full time professor, but kept up his academic teaching at the Sapienza University of Rome. There, he lectured in administrative law and organisation (1929–1931) and constitutional law (1932–1942). In 1931, he published the first volume of the Administrative Law Course. In 1934, he was appointed to the Italian Senate (1934–1945).[6]
In 1938, he authored a controversial legal opinion on the "First marshall of the Empire".[6] This newly created military rank, the highest in the Italian military, was jointly awarded to King Victor Emmanuel III and Benito Mussolini. The King considered vetoing the law creating the rank and asked for formal advice from the President of the Council of State. Romano concluded that the law was not in breach of the Kingdom's constitution; Victor Emmanuel protested vehemently against Romano's opinion, calling him a "pusillanimous opportunist", but eventually promulgated the law.[8]
After the fall of the fascist regime and the creation of the Italian Social Republic, a Nazi-German puppet state in the north of the country, Romano issued provisions for the transferring of the State Council to the fascist-controlled city of Cremona, but, when he was asked to move there, he took the decision to retire.[6] With the end of the civil war and the defeat of fascism, he briefly reassumed his office, but in September 1944 was remitted to the High Court of Justice for sanctions against fascism , and subjected to a purge trial at the Council of State's purge commission.[6] He was suspended from service on 3 October 1944, but applied for and was granted retirement on 29 January 1945, and retained his right to a pension.[9] He was also removed from university teaching and deprived of his position as Senator.[9] In 1946, with the casting vote of Benedetto Croce, he was dismissed from the Accademia dei Lincei.[6] He spent the last years of his life in solitude working on his celebrated book Fragments of a Legal Dictionary, and died in Rome on the 3 November 1947.
Among his disciples are Guido Zanobini, Giovanni Miele, Massimo Severo Giannini and Paolo Biscaretti di Ruffia[10][11]
Relationship with fascism
In October 1928 Romano joined the Fascist party and in the same year was appointed as President of the Consiglio di Stato, Italy's highest administrative court.[7] Contrary to previous practice, the appointment was made on the direct initiative of Benito Mussolini, and it was the only case in the history of the court in which an academic with no previous experience as a state councillor was chosen for the post.
Scholars are divided on the interpretation of this event. According to some, it was a way of co-opting important figures of the establishment into the regime, while for others, it was an attempt to fascistise[clarification needed] the Supreme Administrative Court.[12] Scholars also disagree as to whether his adherence to fascism should be understood as technical collaboration, which had the merit of counteracting the most radical tendencies of the regime,[13] or whether it had the significance of a truly committed choice.[14]
During the fascist dictatorship, Romano managed to maintain a relatively detached and uncommitted public profile. Nevertheless, he accepted an invitation to join the scientific committee of the antisemitic law journal Il diritto razzista ("Racist Law"), founded in 1939 by Stefano Maria Cutelli.[15][16]
Family life
In 1911, Santi Romano married Silvia Faraone, with whom he had two children: Salvatore (born in Modena in 1904, who became professor in private law at the University of Florence) and Silvio (born in Modena in 1907, who became professor of Institutions of Roman Law at the University of Turin).[17][18]
Doctrine
Santi Romano is considered one the leading exponents of legal institutionalism and pluralism in the legal culture of his time. Both were theorised in his most famous work, The Legal Order (1917-1918), which has been translated into Spanish (1963), French (1975), German (1975), Portuguese (2008) and English (2017)[19] and has been described as "the most important Italian legal work of the 20th century".[18][11]
According to Romano, the law, before being a system of rules, is "an organization, a structure,"[20] an entity or social body that is organised, stable and relatively autonomous from other organisations. He calls this entity an "institution", which he identifies with the legal order. There are as many legal orders as there are institutions, since ubi societas ibi ius: where there is society, there is law.[3] Any legal order can be relevant to another, to a greater or lesser degree, as well as completely irrelevant. Certain legal orders may be internal to others: for example, both the state and the international community are, for Santi Romano, "institutions of institutions", legal orders composed of other orders.[21]
Alongside the state and the international community, Romano highlights the proliferation of a growing number of self-regulating legal orders: the "unequivocal signs of a social pluralism typical of the dynamic society of the early 20th century."[11] As his contemporary Maurice Hauriou in France, Romano is concerned with the development of organised societal structures such as mass political parties and trade unions, whose normativity does not depend on state recognition but on their independent capacity to obtain allegiance.[22] Sanctions are not essential for there to be a legal order, according to Romano, as they can be replaced by other effective means of social pressure.[3]
The plurality of legal orders and their internal and spontaneous normativity are relevant for legal scholars. Legal scholars cannot limit themselves to the interpretation of statutory law and other formally established sources of law, but must take into account the actual functioning of social bodies such as public offices, trade unions, factories, supreme constitutional organs and international organisations. They must analyse and expose not only what ought to be according to the rules, but also what happens as a matter of practice: the "boundless horizon [...] of the entire social life."[23]
However, Romano did not embrace sociological jurisprudence and remained a faithful disciple of his mentor, Vittorio Emanuele Orlando, who was the first in Italy to insist on the need to separate law and politics and to adopt a strictly legal method in the study of public law. Also Romano urged jurists to avoid "any contamination of the juristic point of view with non‐legal concepts and methods" and "availed himself of the tools of legal dogmatics."[24][25]
Honours and awards
- Correspondent member of the Academy of Sciences of Turin (1922)[1]
- Member of the Consiglio superiore della pubblica istruzione [High Council for Education] and its Board (1917–1921)[1]
- Member of the Presidential Commission for Constitutional Reforms (1925)[1]
- President of the State Council (15 December 1928 – 11 October 1944)[1]
- Member of the Accademia dei Lincei (16 May 1935 – 4 January 1946)[1]
- Member of the Higher Council of National Education[1]
- Member of the Diplomatic Litigation Council[1]
- Correspondent member of the Accademia di scienze, lettere ed arti of Palermo[1]
- Correspondent member of the Accademia di scienze, lettere ed arti of Modena[1]
- Knight of the Order of the Crown of Italy (1911)[1]
- Officer of the Order of the Crown of Italy (1917)[1]
- Commander of the Order of the Crown of Italy (1921)[1]
- Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown of Italy (1926)[1]
- Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown of Italy (1930)[1]
- Knight of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (1916)[1]
- Officer of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (1921)[1]
- Grand Officer of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (1932)[1]
- Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (1933)[1]
Publications (selected)
In English
- Romano, Santi (2017). Croce, Mariano (ed.). Legal Order. Routledge. ISBN 9780367180805. OCLC 1057785097.
In Italian
- "La teoria dei diritti pubblici subiettivi", in V. Orlando (ed.), Primo Trattato completo di diritto amministrativo italiano, Vol. 1, Milano, 1897 read online
- "L’instaurazione di fatto di un ordinamento costituzionale e la sua legittimazione", in Archivio giuridico, Modena, 1901 (now in Scritti minori, vol. 1, Milano, Giuffrè, 1950) read online
- Principii di diritto amministrativo italiano, Milano, Società Editrice Libraria, 1901 (3rd ed. 1912). read online
- "Lo Stato moderno e la sua crisi", in Rivista di diritto pubblico, 1910 (now in S. Romano, Scritti minori, Vol.1). read online
- Lezioni di diritto ecclesiastico, edited by V. Mungioli, Pisa, Società editrice universitaria, 1912.
- L'ordinamento giuridico, in "Annali delle Università toscane", 1917-1918 (republished in Pisa by Mariotti in 1918; 2nd edition with added footnotes published in Firenze by Sansoni, 1946). read online
- "Oltre lo Stato", in Rivista di diritto pubblico, 1918 (now in S. Romano, Scritti minori, Vol.1). read online
- Corso di diritto coloniale, Roma 1918.
- Lezioni di diritto ecclesiastico, edited by N. Jager, Pisa-Palermo, 1923.
- Corso di diritto costituzionale, Padova, Cedam, 1926 (8th ed. 1943). read online
- Corso di diritto internazionale, Padova, Cedam, 1926 (4th ed. 1939). read online
- Corso di diritto amministrativo: Principi generali, Padova, Cedam, 1930 (3rd ed. 1937). read online
- Prolusioni e discorsi accademici, Università degli Studi di Modena, 1931. read online
- Principii di diritto costituzionale generale, Milano, Giuffrè, 1946. read online
- Frammenti di un dizionario giuridico, Milano, Giuffrè, 1947. read online
- Scritti minori, 2 volumes, Milano, Giuffrè, 1950 (2nd ed. 1990).
- Lo Stato moderno e la sua crisi. Saggi di diritto costituzionale, Milano, Giuffrè, 1969. read online
- Il diritto pubblico italiano, Milano, Giuffrè, 1988.
- Gli scritti nel Trattato Orlando, Milano, Giuffrè, 2003. read online
- L'"ultimo" Santi Romano, Milano, Giuffrè, 2013.
In German
- Italienisches Staatsrechts, Milano, Giuffrè, 1988.
- Die Rechtsordnung, Berlin, Duncker & Humblot, 1975. read online
In French
- L'ordre juridique, Paris, Dalloz, 1975. read online
Writings in Honour
Scritti giuridici in onore di Santi Romano, 4 volumes, Padova, Cedam, 1940
See also
Notes and references
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "Scheda senatore ROMANO Santi". www.senato.it. Archived from the original on 29 January 2024. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ Ridolfi 2017, p. 5.
- ^ a b c Bartolini 2020, p. 150.
- ^ a b Romano 2013, p. 849.
- ^ a b Sandulli 2009, p. 5.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Sandulli 2009, p. 6.
- ^ a b c Ridolfi 2017, pp. 6.
- ^ Virga, Giovanni (22 August 2010). "Il Consiglio di Stato alle prese con la spinosa questione del "primo maresciallato dell'Impero"". LexItalia.it weblog (in Italian). Retrieved 31 January 2024.
- ^ a b Ridolfi 2017, p. 9.
- ^ Romano 2013, pp. 849–851.
- ^ a b c Melis 2017.
- ^ Ridolfi 2017, pp. 10–11.
- ^ Ferrajoli 1999, p. 46: "The prestigious tradition embodied by Orlando and Romano managed to contain the efforts of those, such as Carlo Costamagna and Sergio Panunzio, who advocated a break with continuity and the re-founding of the State on the basis of an explicit constitutionalisation of the principles of fascism and corporatism."
- ^ Ridolfi 2017, pp. 5–6.
- ^ Ridolfi 2017, p. 7.
- ^ De Napoli 2012, pp. 98 and 111.
- ^ "Romano, Santi - Treccani". Treccani (in Italian). Retrieved 31 January 2024.
- ^ a b Sandulli 2013, p. 1729.
- ^ Cassese 2015.
- ^ Romano 2017, p. 13.
- ^ Sandulli 2013, p. 1730.
- ^ Scarcello 2023, p. 37.
- ^ Romano, Santi (1947). Frammenti di un dizionario giuridico. Milano: Giuffrè. p. 115.
- ^ Croce 2017, pp. 114 and 116.
- ^ Fioravanti 1981, p. 174.
References
- Bartolini, Giulio (2020). "Italy between the Two World Wars: International Law Issues". In Bartolini, Giulio (ed.). A History of International Law in Italy. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198842934.003.0006. ISBN 9780191878831.
- Cassese, Sabino (2015). "Ipotesi sulla fortuna all'estero de L'ordinamento giuridico di Santi Romano" (PDF). Rivista trimestrale di diritto pubblico (in Italian). 65 (1): 177–182.
- Croce, Mariano (2017). "Afterward". Legal Order. By Romano, Santi. Croce, Mariano (ed.). Routledge. ISBN 9780367180805. OCLC 1057785097.
- De Napoli, Olindo (2012). "Come nasce una rivista giuridica antisemita. Tradizionalismo e razzismo nell'azione di Stefano Mario Cutelli". Le Carte e la Storia (in Italian) (2): 98–116. doi:10.1411/38888. ISSN 1123-5624.
- Ferrajoli, Luigi (1999). La cultura giuridica nell'Italia del Novecento (in Italian). Roma-Bari: Laterza. ISBN 88-420-5700-2.
- Fioravanti, Maurizio (1981). "Per l'interpretazione dell'opera giuridica di Santi Romano: nuove prospettive della ricerca" (PDF). Quaderni Fiorentini per la Storia del Pensiero Giuridico Moderno (in Italian). 10 (1): 169–219. ISSN 0392-1867.
- Melis, Guido (2017). "Romano, Santi". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Vol. 88. Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana.
- Ridolfi, Andrea (2017). "I "Decostituiti" de "La Sapienza": Santi Romano, Maurizio Maraviglia e Carlo Costamagna" (PDF). Nomos. Le attualità del diritto (3): 1–27. ISSN 2279-7238.
- Romano, Alberto (2013). "Nota bio-bibliografica". L'"ultimo" Santi Romano. Milano: Giuffrè. pp. 843–876. ISBN 978-88-14-15474-4.
- Sandulli, Aldo (2009). "Santi Romano and the Perception of the Public Law Complexity" (PDF). Italian Journal of Public Law. 1 (1): 21–48. ISSN 2239-8279.
- Sandulli, Aldo (2013). "Romano, Santi". Dizionario biografico dei giuristi italiani (XII-XX secolo) (in Italian). Vol. 2. Bologna: il Mulino. pp. 1728–1731. ISBN 978-88-15-24124-5.
- Scarcello, Orlando (2023). Radical constitutional pluralism in Europe. Abingdon, Oxon. ISBN 978-1-032-27147-7. OCLC 1338834909.
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Further reading
- Biscaretti di Ruffia, Paolo, ed. (1977). Le dottrine giuridiche di oggi e l'insegnamento di Santi Romano. Giuffrè.
- Casadei, Thomas; Pietropaoli, Stefano (2018). "Nota editoriale. "Ricucire" prassi e teoria del diritto: spunti di riflessione a partire da Santi Romano" (PDF). Jura Gentium. 15 (2).
- Cassese, Sabino (1972). "Ipotesi sulla formazione de "Lʼordinamento giuridico" di Santi Romano" (PDF). Quaderni Fiorentini per la Storia del Pensiero Giuridico Moderno (in Italian). 1 (1): 243–283. ISSN 0392-1867.
- Cavallo Perin, Roberto; et al. (2019). Attualità e necessità del pensiero di Santi Romano : Pisa, 14-15 giugno 2018 (in Italian). Napoli: Editoriale Scientifica. ISBN 978-88-9391-651-6. OCLC 1176203238.
- Cazzetta, Giovanni, ed. (2021). "Il pluralismo giuridico: paradigmi ed esperienze". Quaderni Fiorentini per la Storia del Pensiero Giuridico Moderno. 50.
- Cotterrell, Roger (23 July 2019). "Still Afraid of Legal Pluralism? Encountering Santi Romano". Law & Social Inquiry. 45 (2). Cambridge University Press (CUP): 539–558. doi:10.1017/lsi.2019.24. ISSN 0897-6546. S2CID 199782975.
- Croce, Mariano; Goldoni, Marco (25 August 2020). The Legacy of Pluralism. Stanford University Press. doi:10.1515/9781503613126. ISBN 978-1-5036-1312-6. S2CID 242262027.Croce, Mariano, ed. (2018). "Special issue/Book symposium: The Legal Order". Ethics & Global Politics. 11 (2).
- Croce, Mariano; Goldoni, Marco (2020). The Legacy of Pluralism. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1-5036-1211-2.
- Croce, Mariano (24 July 2018). "Whither the state? On Santi Romano'sThe legal order". Ethics & Global Politics. 11 (2). Informa UK Limited: 1–11. doi:10.1080/16544951.2018.1498699. hdl:11573/1131506. ISSN 1654-4951.
- Croce, Mariano (2023). Un dialogo su Santi Romano. Crisi, istituzione, tecniche (in Italian). Pisa: ETS. ISBN 978-88-467-6615-1.
- Esposito, Roberto (2021). "Diritto, filosofia e politica in Santi Romano". In Lanzillo, Maria Laura; Laudani, Raffaele (eds.). Figure del potere. Saggi in onore di Carlo Galli (in Italian). il Mulino. ISBN 978-88-15-29076-2.
- Fontanelli, Filippo (2011). "Santi Romano andL'ordinamento giuridico: The Relevance of a Forgotten Masterpiece for Contemporary International, Transnational and Global Legal Relations". Transnational Legal Theory. 2 (1). Informa UK Limited: 67–117. doi:10.5235/tlt.v2n1.67. ISSN 2041-4005. S2CID 55452953.
- Mazzamuto, Marco, ed. (2020). Santi Romano : L'ordinamento giuridico (1917-2017) : la fortuna della teoria romaniana dell'ordinamento dalla sua pubblicazione ai tempi nostri nelle varie aree disciplinari : Palermo, 24-25 novembre 2017 (in Italian). Napoli: Editoriale scientifica. ISBN 978-88-9391-836-7. OCLC 1238140832.
- Melis, Guido (2004). "Il Consiglio di Stato ai tempi di Santi Romano". La giustizia amministrativa ai tempi di Santi Romano presidente del Consiglio di Stato (in Italian). Torino: Giappichelli. ISBN 88-348-3495-X.
- Olivari, Alessandro (2016). Santi Romano ontologo del diritto (in Italian). LED Edizioni Universitarie. ISBN 978-88-7916-779-6.
- Salvatore, Andrea (22 July 2018). "A counter-mine that explodes silently: Romano and Schmitt on the unity of the legal order". Ethics & Global Politics. 11 (2). Informa UK Limited: 50–59. doi:10.1080/16544951.2018.1498698. hdl:11573/1149101. ISSN 1654-4951.
- Sandulli, Aldo (2021). "L'ordinamento giuridico" nel centenario (in Italian). Bologna: il Mulino. ISBN 978-88-15-29241-4.
- Vinx, Lars (22 July 2018). "Santi Romano against the state?". Ethics & Global Politics. 11 (2). Informa UK Limited: 25–36. doi:10.1080/16544951.2018.1498697. ISSN 1654-4951.
External links
- The digitised works of Santi Romano, by DigitUniTO
- 1875 births
- 1947 deaths
- Italian jurists
- Italian legal scholars
- 20th-century Italian philosophers
- International law scholars
- Philosophers of law
- University of Palermo alumni
- Academic staff of the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
- Academic staff of the University of Pisa
- Academic staff of the University of Milan
- Academic staff of the University of Camerino
- 20th-century Italian judges
- 20th-century Italian jurists
- Jurists from Sicily
- Italian fascists
- Members of the Senate of the Kingdom of Italy
- Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Italy)
- Recipients of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus
- Members of the Lincean Academy