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Cesare Lombroso

Index Cesare Lombroso

Cesare Lombroso (born Ezechia Marco Lombroso; 6 November 1835 – 19 October 1909), was an Italian criminologist and physician, founder of the Italian School of Positivist Criminology. [1]

112 relations: Abdullah Cevdet, Alexandre Lacassagne, Alfredo Niceforo, Anthropological criminology, Antonio Boggia, Argentina Centennial, Arnold Aletrino, Art of the Third Reich, Atavism, Battalions of Light Infantry of Africa, Bénédict Morel, Bipolar disorder, Bruneri-Canella case, Bruno Rossi, Camillo Golgi, Carl von Rokitansky, Carlo Giacomini, Charles Buckman Goring, Citizens (Spanish political party), Craniometry, Crime in Cuba, Criminal psychology, Criminology, Criticisms of Salvador Allende, Crowd psychology, Degenerate art, Degeneration theory, Die Psychologie des Verbrechers, Disability in the arts, Eden Paul, Edinburgh Phrenological Society, Elio Modigliani, Emil Kraepelin, Enrico Ferri, Ercole Chiaia, Ernst Jentsch, Eusapia Palladino, Fabrizio De Rossi Re, Feminist pathways perspective, Feminist school of criminology, Franz Joseph Gall, Gabriel Tarde, Genius, George Cecil Ives, Giambattista della Porta, Giovanni Passannante, Giuseppe Musolino, Giuseppe Sergi, Guglielmo Ferrero, Gustav Aschaffenburg, ..., Harry T. Hayward, History of anthropometry, History of psychopathy, History of United States prison systems, Index of criminology articles, Italian Fascism, Italian school of criminology, Joseph McCabe, Juan Carlos Girauta, Jun Tsuji, Just Above My Head, Kurt Schneider, L'Amour de la femme vénale, Lasso of Truth, Leonardo Bistolfi, Leone Sinigaglia, List of atheists (miscellaneous), List of criminologists, List of Italian inventors, List of Jewish atheists and agnostics, List of people from Turin, List of physicians, List of West European Jews, Lombroso, Louis Westenra Sambon, Max Nordau, Napoleone Colajanni, News from the Republic of Letters, Nicola Barbato, Nicole Hahn Rafter, Nordic race, November 6, Octave Uzanne, October 1909, Oskar Panizza, Pariah (play), Pavel Jacobi, Pellagra, Phrenology, Physiognomy, Polygraph, Positivist school (criminology), Pre-crime, Primitivo González del Alba, Prison, Psychological typologies, Pyotr Gannushkin, Race and crime in the United States, Racism in Italy, Raffaele Garofalo, Red hair, Revisionism of Risorgimento, Ricardo Mella, Salvador Allende, Sex-positive feminism, Sexual Morality and the Law, The Secret Agent, University of Turin, Venus Castina, Verona, 1909, 1909 in Italy. Expand index (62 more) »

Abdullah Cevdet

Abdullah Cevdet (عبدالله جودت‎; Abdullah Cevdet Karlıdağ; 9 September 1869 – 29 November 1932) was an Ottoman-born Turkish intellectual and physician of ethnic Kurdish origin.

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Alexandre Lacassagne

Alexandre Lacassagne (August 17, 1843 – September 24, 1924) was a French physician and criminologist who was a native of Cahors.

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Alfredo Niceforo

Alfredo Niceforo (23 January 1876 – 10 March 1960, Rome, Italy) was an Italian statistician and scientific racist.

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Anthropological criminology

Anthropological criminology (sometimes referred to as criminal anthropology, literally a combination of the study of the human species and the study of criminals) is a field of offender profiling, based on perceived links between the nature of a crime and the personality or physical appearance of the offender.

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Antonio Boggia

Antonio Boggia born 23 December 1799 in Urio - died Milano, 8th april 1862, AKA "Il Mostro di Stratta Bagnera"(The Monster Of Bagnera lane) or "Il Mostro di Milano"(The Monster of Milan), is considered the first serial killer of Italy.

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Argentina Centennial

The Argentina Centennial was celebrated on May 25, 1910.

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Arnold Aletrino

Arnold Aletrino (1 April 1858 – 16 January 1916) was a Dutch physician, criminal anthropologist and writer, who published works on homosexuality in Dutch and French.

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Art of the Third Reich

The art of the Third Reich was the government-approved art produced in Nazi Germany between 1933 and 1945.

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Atavism

In biology, an atavism is a modification of a biological structure whereby an ancestral trait reappears after having been lost through evolutionary change in previous generations.

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Battalions of Light Infantry of Africa

The Battalions of Light Infantry of Africa (French: Bataillons d'Infanterie Légère d'Afrique or BILA), better known under the acronym Bat' d'Af, were French infantry and construction units, serving in Northern Africa, made up of men with prison records who still had to do their military service or soldiers with serious disciplinary problems.

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Bénédict Morel

Bénédict Augustin Morel (22 November 1809 – 30 March 1873) was a French psychiatrist born in Vienna, Austria.

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Bipolar disorder

Bipolar disorder, previously known as manic depression, is a mental disorder that causes periods of depression and periods of abnormally elevated mood.

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Bruneri-Canella case

The Bruneri-Canella case, called in Italian the case of the Smemorato di Collegno (the Collegno Amnesiac), is a notorious judicial and media affair concerning the alleged reappearance in 1926 of a man who had gone missing in World War I. The question of his identity was thoroughly discussed in newspapers and in courtrooms, and endured for almost 40 years.

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Bruno Rossi

Bruno Benedetto Rossi (13 April 1905 – 21 November 1993) was an Italian experimental physicist.

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Camillo Golgi

Camillo Golgi (7 July 1843 – 21 January 1926) was an Italian biologist and pathologist known for his works on the central nervous system.

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Carl von Rokitansky

Baron Carl von Rokitansky (Carl Freiherr von Rokitansky, Karel Rokytanský) (19 February 1804 – 23 July 1878), was a Bohemian Physician, Pathologist, humanist philosopher and liberal politician.

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Carlo Giacomini

Carlo Giacomini (Sale, 29 November 1840 – Torino, 5 July 1898), was a noted Italian anatomist, neuroscientist, and a professor at the University of Turin who also made significant contributions in anthropology and embryology.

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Charles Buckman Goring

Charles Buckman Goring (1870–1919) was a pioneer in criminology and author of the influential work The English convict: a statistical study.

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Citizens (Spanish political party)

Citizens (Ciudadanos; Ciutadans; Hiritarrak; Cidadáns; shortened as Cs—C's until January 2017), officially Citizens – Party of the Citizenry (Ciudadanos – Partido de la Ciudadanía), is a centre-right and liberal political party in Spain.

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Craniometry

Craniometry is measurement of the cranium (the main part of the skull), usually the human cranium.

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Crime in Cuba

Crime is present in various forms in Cuba though the government does not release official crime statistics.

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Criminal psychology

Criminal psychology, also referred to as criminological psychology, is the study of the wills, thoughts, intentions, and reactions of criminals and all that partakes in the criminal behavior.

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Criminology

Criminology (from Latin crīmen, "accusation" originally derived from the Ancient Greek verb "krino" "κρίνω", and Ancient Greek -λογία, -logy|-logia, from "logos" meaning: “word,” “reason,” or “plan”) is the scientific study of the nature, extent, management, causes, control, consequences, and prevention of criminal behavior, both on the individual and social levels.

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Criticisms of Salvador Allende

Salvador Allende, President of Chile, has inspired a variety of perceptions regarding his policies, personality and performance as a head of state.

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Crowd psychology

Crowd psychology, also known as mob psychology, is a branch of social psychology.

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Degenerate art

Degenerate art (Entartete Kunst) was a term adopted in the 1920s by the Nazi Party in Germany to describe modern art.

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Degeneration theory

Social degeneration was a widely influential concept at the interface of the social and biological sciences in the 19th century.

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Die Psychologie des Verbrechers

Die Psychologie des Verbrechers – Kriminalpsychologie (English: The psychology of a felon – criminal psychology; 2nd edition) was a book written by Dr.

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Disability in the arts

Disability in the arts is an aspect within various arts disciplines of inclusive practices involving disability.

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Eden Paul

Maurice Eden Paul (27 September 1865 – 1 December 1944) was a British socialist physician, writer and translator.

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Edinburgh Phrenological Society

The Edinburgh Phrenological Society was founded in 1820 by lawyer George Combe and his physician brother Andrew.

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Elio Modigliani

Elio Modigliani (13 June 1860 – 6 August 1932) was an Italian anthropologist, zoologist, explorer, and plant collector.

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Emil Kraepelin

Emil Kraepelin (15 February 1856 – 7 October 1926) was a German psychiatrist.

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Enrico Ferri

Enrico Ferri (25 February 1856 – 12 April 1929) was an Italian criminologist, socialist and student of Cesare Lombroso, the founder of the Italian school of criminology.

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Ercole Chiaia

Ercole Chaia (born around 1850 - deceased 1905) was an Italian spiritualist who became particularly well known for working as manager of the medium Eusapia Palladino.

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Ernst Jentsch

Ernst Anton Jentsch (1867-1919) was a German psychiatrist.

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Eusapia Palladino

Eusapia Palladino (alternate spelling: Paladino; 21 January 1854 – 16 May 1918) was an Italian Spiritualist physical medium.

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Fabrizio De Rossi Re

Fabrizio De Rossi Re (born 1 August 1960, in Rome) is an Italian composer and librettist.

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Feminist pathways perspective

The feminist pathways perspective is a feminist perspective of criminology which suggests victimization throughout the life course is a key risk factor for women's entry into offending.

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Feminist school of criminology

The feminist school of criminology is a school of criminology developed in the late 1960s and into the 1970s as a reaction to the general disregard and discrimination of women in the traditional study of crime.

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Franz Joseph Gall

Franz Josef Gall (9 March 175822 August 1828) was a neuroanatomist, physiologist, and pioneer in the study of the localization of mental functions in the brain.

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Gabriel Tarde

Gabriel Tarde (in full Jean-Gabriel De Tarde; 12 March 1843 – 13 May 1904) was a French sociologist, criminologist and social psychologist who conceived sociology as based on small psychological interactions among individuals (much as if it were chemistry), the fundamental forces being imitation and innovation.

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Genius

A genius is a person who displays exceptional intellectual ability, creative productivity, universality in genres or originality, typically to a degree that is associated with the achievement of new advances in a domain of knowledge.

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George Cecil Ives

George Cecil Ives (1 October 1867 in Germany – 4 June 1950) was an English poet, writer, penal reformer and early homosexual law reform campaigner.

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Giambattista della Porta

Giambattista della Porta (1535? – 4 February 1615), also known as Giovanni Battista Della Porta, was an Italian scholar, polymath and playwright who lived in Naples at the time of the Scientific Revolution and Reformation.

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Giovanni Passannante

Giovanni Passannante (February 19, 1849 – February 14, 1910) was an Italian Republican who attempted to assassinate king Umberto I of Italy, the first attempt against Savoy monarchy since its origins.

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Giuseppe Musolino

Giuseppe Musolino (24 September 1876 – 22 January 1956), also known as the "Brigante Musolino" or the "King of Aspromonte", was an Italian brigand and folk hero.

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Giuseppe Sergi

Giuseppe Sergi (March 20, 1841 – October 17, 1936) was an Italian anthropologist of the early twentieth century, best known for his opposition to Nordicism in his books on the racial identity of ancient Mediterranean peoples.

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Guglielmo Ferrero

Guglielmo Ferrero (July 21, 1871 — August 3, 1942) was an Italian historian, journalist and novelist, author of the Greatness and Decline of Rome (5 volumes, published after English translation 1907–1909).

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Gustav Aschaffenburg

Gustav Aschaffenburg (May 23, 1866 – September 2, 1944) was a German psychiatrist born in Zweibrücken.

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Harry T. Hayward

Harry T. Hayward (c. 1865 – December 12, 1895) was an American socialite, gambler, arsonist, and murderer during the Victorian Era.

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History of anthropometry

The history of anthropometry includes the use of anthropometry as an early tool of physical anthropology, use for identification, use for the purposes of understanding human physical variation, in paleoanthropology, and in various attempts to correlate physical with racial and psychological traits.

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History of psychopathy

Psychopathy, from psych (soul or mind) and pathy (suffering or disease), was coined by German psychiatrists in the 19th century and originally just meant what would today be called mental disorder, the study of which is still known as psychopathology.

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History of United States prison systems

Imprisonment as a form of criminal punishment only became widespread in the United States just before the American Revolution, though penal incarceration efforts had been ongoing in England since as early as the 1500s, and prisons in the form of dungeons and various detention facilities had existed since long before then.

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Index of criminology articles

Articles related to criminology and law enforcement.

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Italian Fascism

Italian Fascism (fascismo italiano), also known simply as Fascism, is the original fascist ideology as developed in Italy.

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Italian school of criminology

The Italian school of criminology was founded at the end of the 19th century by Cesare Lombroso (1835–1909) and two of his Italian disciples, Enrico Ferri (1856–1929) and Raffaele Garofalo (1851–1934).

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Joseph McCabe

Joseph Martin McCabe (12 November 1867 – 10 January 1955) was an English writer and speaker on freethought, after having been a Roman Catholic priest earlier in his life.

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Juan Carlos Girauta

Juan Carlos Girauta (born 12 March 1961 in Barcelona), is a Spanish politician, who, from July 2014 until January 2016 served as a Member of the European Parliament, representing Spain for the Citizens political party.

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Jun Tsuji

, was a Japanese author: a poet, essayist, playwright, and translator.

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Just Above My Head

Just Above My Head is James Baldwin's sixth novel, first published in 1979.

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Kurt Schneider

Kurt Schneider (7 January 1887 – 27 October 1967) was a German psychiatrist known largely for his writing on the diagnosis and understanding of schizophrenia, as well as personality disorders then known as psychopathic personalities.

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L'Amour de la femme vénale

Translated from Bulgarian, L'Amour de la femme vénale is the French title of a brief essay by Octave Mirbeau on prostitution, which appeared in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, in 1922: Любовта на продажната жена.

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Lasso of Truth

The Lasso of Truth is a fictional weapon wielded by DC Comics superheroine Wonder Woman, Princess Diana of Themyscira.

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Leonardo Bistolfi

Leonardo Bistolfi (14 March 1859 – 2 September 1933) was an Italian sculptor, an important exponent of Italian Symbolism.

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Leone Sinigaglia

Leone Sinigaglia (14 August 1868 – 16 May 1944) was an Italian composer and mountaineer.

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List of atheists (miscellaneous)

This is a list of atheists.

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List of criminologists

This is a list of notable social scientists that work in the field of criminology and criminal justice.

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List of Italian inventors

This is a list of Italian inventors.

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List of Jewish atheists and agnostics

Based on Jewish law's emphasis on matrilineal descent, even religiously conservative Orthodox Jewish authorities would accept an atheist born to a Jewish mother as fully Jewish.

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List of people from Turin

List of people from or associated with the city of Turin, and its environs.

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List of physicians

This is a list of famous physicians in history.

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List of West European Jews

Apart from France, established Jewish populations exist in the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and Switzerland.

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Lombroso

Lombroso, Lumbroso, Lumbrozo is a surname, derived from a Sephardi family, members of which lived in Tunis, Marseilles, and Italy.

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Louis Westenra Sambon

Louis Westenra Sambon (original first name Luigi, 7 November 1867 – 30 August 1931) was an Italian-English physician who played important roles in understanding the causes (etiology) of diseases.

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Max Nordau

Max Simon Nordau (born Simon Maximilian Südfeld; July 29, 1849 – January 23, 1923), was a Zionist leader, physician, author, and social critic.

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Napoleone Colajanni

Napoleone Colajanni (Castrogiovanni, 27 April 1847 – Castrogiovanni, 2 September 1921) was an Italian writer, journalist, criminologist, socialist and politician.

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News from the Republic of Letters

News from the Republic of Letters is the third magazine collaboration between Saul Bellow and Keith Botsford, following Noble Savage and ANON.

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Nicola Barbato

Nicola Barbato (Piana dei Greci, October 5, 1856 - Milan, May 23, 1923) was a Sicilian medical doctor, socialist and politician.

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Nicole Hahn Rafter

Nicole Hahn Rafter (1939–2016; English pronunciation: ni-kohl h-ah-n raf-ter) was a feminist criminology professor at Northeastern University.

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Nordic race

The Nordic race was one of the putative sub-races into which some late-19th to mid-20th-century anthropologists divided the Caucasian race.

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November 6

No description.

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Octave Uzanne

Octave Uzanne (14 September 1851 – 31 October 1931) was a 19th-century French bibliophile, writer, publisher, and journalist.

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October 1909

The following events occurred in October 1909.

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Oskar Panizza

Leopold Hermann Oskar Panizza (12 November 1853 – 28 September 1921) was a German psychiatrist and avant-garde author, playwright, novelist, poet, essayist, publisher and literary journal editor.

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Pariah (play)

Pariah (Paria) is a one-act play written by August Strindberg.

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Pavel Jacobi

Pavel Ivanovich Jacobi (Павел Иванович Якоби or Якобий;, Kazan -) was a Russian revolutionary socialist, member of the Land and Liberty society, ethnographer and physician.

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Pellagra

Pellagra is a disease caused by a lack of the vitamin niacin (vitamin B3).

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Phrenology

Phrenology is a pseudomedicine primarily focused on measurements of the human skull, based on the concept that the brain is the organ of the mind, and that certain brain areas have localized, specific functions or modules.

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Physiognomy

Physiognomy (from the Greek φύσις physis meaning "nature" and gnomon meaning "judge" or "interpreter") is the assessment of character or personality from a person's outer appearance, especially the face often linked to racial and sexual stereotyping.

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Polygraph

A polygraph, popularly referred to as a lie detector, measures and records several physiological indices such as blood pressure, pulse, respiration, and skin conductivity while a person is asked and answers a series of questions.

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Positivist school (criminology)

In criminology, the Positivist School has attempted to find scientific objectivity for the measurement and quantification of criminal behavior.

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Pre-crime

Pre-crime (or precrime) is a term coined by science fiction author Philip K. Dick.

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Primitivo González del Alba

Primitivo González del Alba (1849–1913) was a Spanish jurist, legal writer and criminologist from Burgos in northern Spain.

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Prison

A prison, also known as a correctional facility, jail, gaol (dated, British English), penitentiary (American English), detention center (American English), or remand center is a facility in which inmates are forcibly confined and denied a variety of freedoms under the authority of the state.

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Psychological typologies

Psychological typologies are classifications used by psychologists to describe the distinctions between people.

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Pyotr Gannushkin

Pyotr Borisovich Gannushkin (Пётр Бори́сович Га́ннушкин; March 8, 1875 – February 23, 1933) was a Russian psychiatrist who developed one of the first theories of psychopathies known today as personality disorders.

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Race and crime in the United States

The relationship between race and crime in the United States has been a topic of public controversy and scholarly debate for more than a century.

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Racism in Italy

Racism in Italy deals with the relations of Italians and other ethnic groups in the history of Italy.

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Raffaele Garofalo

Raffaele Garofalo (18 November 1851 in Naples – 18 April 1934 in Naples) was an Italian criminologist and jurist.

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Red hair

Red hair (or ginger hair) occurs naturally in 1–2% of the human population.

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Revisionism of Risorgimento

Historian John A. Davis, said in 2005, "Everyone, it seems, is busy rethinking, revisioning, revisiting, remaking, remapping or demythologizing the Risorgimento.

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Ricardo Mella

Ricardo Mella Cea (April 13, 1861 – August 7, 1925) was one of the first writers, intellectuals and anarchist activists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Spain.

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Salvador Allende

Salvador Guillermo Allende Gossens (26 June 1908 – 11 September 1973) was a Chilean physician and politician, known as the first Marxist to become president of a Latin American country through open elections.

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Sex-positive feminism

Sex-positive feminism, also known as pro-sex feminism, sex-radical feminism, or sexually liberal feminism, is a movement that began in the early 1980s centering on the idea that sexual freedom is an essential component of women's freedom.

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Sexual Morality and the Law

Sexual Morality and the Law is the transcription of a 1978 radio conversation in Paris between philosopher Michel Foucault, playwright/actor/lawyer Jean Danet, and novelist/gay activist Guy Hocquenghem, debating the idea of abolishing age of consent laws in France.

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The Secret Agent

The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale is a novel by Joseph Conrad, published in 1907.

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University of Turin

The University of Turin (Italian: Università degli Studi di Torino, or often abbreviated to UNITO) is a university in the city of Turin in the Piedmont region of north-western Italy.

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Venus Castina

Venus Castina ('Chaste Venus') from Latin castus, is claimed to be an epithet of the Roman goddess Venus; in this form, she was supposedly associated with "the yearnings of feminine souls locked up in male bodies".

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Verona

Verona (Venetian: Verona or Veròna) is a city on the Adige river in Veneto, Italy, with approximately 257,000 inhabitants and one of the seven provincial capitals of the region.

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1909

No description.

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1909 in Italy

See also: 1908 in Italy, other events of 1909, 1910 in Italy.

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Redirects here:

Lombroso's monument in Verona.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesare_Lombroso

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