Sicilian cultures of violence: The interconnections between organized crime and local society |
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Authors: | Amedeo Cottino |
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Affiliation: | (1) Dipartimento di Scienze sociali, Università di Torino, Via S. Ottavio 50, Torino, 10124, Italy (e-mail |
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Abstract: | The phenomenon of organized crime in Sicily has survived throughout all political changes and economic transformations that
have taken place in Italy in the post war period. In search of an explanation, some scholars have blamed the absence of the
State; some others have stressed the historically predatory relation between the State and the Southern regions; recently
it has been argued that what makes Sicilian organized crime successful is the fact that it sells protection in a market characterized
by an endemic lack of trust. Little attention instead has been paid to the cultural traits and, more specifically to the culture
of violence which Sicilian criminality has in common with traditional Mediterranean society. In his investigation of the moral
and legal system of a Sicilian criminal organization, the author shows how the same ideas of trust and honour and the notions
of crime and of punishment can be found among Sicilian peasants and Sardinian herdsmen as well. This common heritage, which
represents the historical memory of a world of material and moral deprivation, contributes to make vain any attempt to make
an end to the war against Mafia by using repressive instruments. Other interventions, both at the material and cultural level,
are wanted before the actual scenery may significantly change.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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