Brazilian Criminological Thinking during the First Republic (1889-1930) - new paper on SSRN

November 30, 2016

Brazilian Criminological Thinking during the First Republic (1889-1930) by Rebeca Fernandes Dias has recently been published in our SSRN Research Paper Series.

This paper synthesizes research that aimed to analyse how criminological thinking was received in Brazil during the First Republic (1889-1930). It presents a broad view of positivist criminology, its rise and, most of all, how this school of thought was received in Brazilian legal culture. We have identified criminal law scholars from the country's main law schools (Rio de Janeiro, Recife, São Paulo, Bahia e Curitiba) and analysed their syllabi and published works in order to identify how positivist criminology was adopted during this period. In this paper, we explain the conclusions reached in the broader study, focusing on the duality of liberal discourse and how it combined with criminal positivism, which is one the most notable traits identified in the majority of the jurists analysed.

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