Luigi Rossi (politician)
{{Short description|Italian lawyer, jurist and politician}}
{{Infobox officeholder
|name = Luigi Rossi
|image = Luigi Rossi 1867-1941.JPG
|office = Member of the Chamber of Deputies
|term_start = 30 November 1904
|term_end = 25 January 1924
|office2 = Minister of the Colonies
|term_start2 = 23 June 1919
|term_end2 = 13 March 1920
|term_start3 = 15 June 1920
|term_end3 = 4 July 1921
|office4 = Minister of Justice
|term_start4 = 26 February 1922
|term_end4 = 1 August 1922
|party = Italian Radical Party
}}
Luigi Rossi (Verona, 29 April 1867 – Rome, 29 October 1941) was an Italian lawyer, jurist and politician.{{cite web |title=ROSSI, Luigi |url=https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/luigi-rossi_res-79d1714f-8bb6-11dc-8e9d-0016357eee51_%28Enciclopedia-Italiana%29/ |website=treccani.it |publisher=Enciclopedia Italiana |access-date=16 October 2023}}{{cite web |title=Luigi Rossi |url=https://storia.camera.it/deputato/luigi-rossi-18670429 |website=storia.camera.it |publisher=Camera dei Deputati |access-date=16 October 2023}}
Political career
At the University of Bologna, he was first a freelance lecturer (from 1890), then from the following year a lecturer by appointment, becoming full professor of constitutional law in 1899.
He was elected deputy from the constituency of Verona in the XXII, XXIII, XXIV, XXV and XXVI legislature of the Kingdom of Italy; politically, he joined the ranks of the moderate liberals. He was Undersecretary of Public Instruction from 28 March to 24 December 1905 and then Undersecretary of Justice from 24 December 1905 to 8 February 2006, before becoming Vice President of the Chamber from 25 March to 16 June 1920.
He was Minister of the Colonies in the first Nitti government and in the fifth Giolitti government in 1919-21 as well as Minister of Justice in the first Facta government in 1922.
Minister of the Colonies
In the Nitti cabinet he took a hard line over the postwar negotiations with France and Britain. The Italian aim was to expand its colonial territories; France’s unwillingness to give up Djibouti to Italy prompted Gaspare Colosimo to cut short negotiations; Rossi backed him in this though Foreign Minister Tommaso Tittoni argued that concessions in Cyrenaica, Tripolitania and elsewhere were more important, and ultimately Tittoni won the argument in cabinet.{{cite book |last1=Monzali |first1=Luciano |last2=Soave |first2=Paolo |title=Italy and Libya From Colonialism to a Special Relationship (1911–2021) |date=2023 |publisher=Taylor and Francis |location=London |isbn=9781000893175 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vky6EAAAQBAJ&dq=luigi+rossi+colonie&pg=PT46 |access-date=16 October 2023}}
Colosimo and Rossi also agreed on the establishment of colonial citizenship for the Arab population of Cyrenaica and Tripolitania, drawing explicitly on the assimilationist policies of classical Rome as their historical model.{{cite book |last1=Donati |first1=Sabina |title=A Political History of National Citizenship and Identity in Italy, 1861–1950 |date=2013 |publisher=Stanford University Press |location=Stanford CA |isbn=9780804787338 |page=147 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KQ0MAAAAQBAJ&dq=luigi+rossi+cyrenaica&pg=PA147 |access-date=16 October 2023}}
As minister he stipulated a convention according to which the insurgent Arab forces recognized Italian sovereignty over Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, in exchange for large autonomy in the area directly controlled by their leader Ahmed Sharif as-Senussi.{{cite book |title=La Civiltà cattolica Issues 1681–1686 |date=1920 |publisher=La Civiltà Cattolica |location=Rome |page=279 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KOq0VJXINU8C&dq=luigi+rossi+libia&pg=PA278 |access-date=17 October 2023}} This agreement achieved a temporary pacification of the colony, until Mussolini denounced it and reopened the conflict.{{cite book|first=Carlo |last=Sforza |title=L'Italia dal 1914 al 1944 quale io la vidi |publisher=Mondadori |place=Rome |date=1945 |page=54}}
Minister of Justice
Although he was Minister of Justice for only five months, Rossi attempted to take a firmer line than his predecessors Luigi Fera and Giulio Rodinò against attacks on public order by the rising fascist movement. In this brief period he issued six circulars to public prosecutors about what he described as the “negligent” attitude of the magistrates in the face of abuses being committed across the country. In the first of these, in May 1922, he urged magistrates to face the urgent need for "judicial treatment" of the violence of the different political factions. A few days later he took a stand against the ransacking of newspaper headquarters which, since the rise of fascism, had often been burned or occupied. He denounced the threats to which journalists were subject and reminded the prosecutors that the State had to ensure the freedom of the press.{{cite journal |last1=Beaulieu |first1=Yannick |title=La presse italienne, le pouvoir politique et l'autorité judiciaire durant le fascisme |journal=Amnis |date=2004 |volume=4 |issue=4 |doi=10.4000/amnis.673 |url=https://journals.openedition.org/amnis/673?lang=es |access-date=17 October 2023|doi-access=free }}
In July 1922 his circulars grew more frequent; those dated 8, 12 and 15 of the month indicate his frustration that the courts are not impartially applying the law to crimes of a political nature. These circulars were also a sign that the judicial system was too slow and unable to respond adequately to the lawlessness that had taken hold in the country.
Later academic career
In 1924, following the installation of Mussolini’s regime, Rossi withdrew from political life, never joining the National Fascist Party. He was assigned to the School of Political and Administrative Sciences at the Faculty of Law in Rome and in 1925 he was one of the founding professors of the first faculty of political sciences in Italy. He then served as the long-term director of the Institute of Public Law and Social Legislation.{{cite web |title=ROSSI, Luigi |url=https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/luigi-rossi_res-d861bed8-297c-11eb-aba9-00271042e8d9_%28Dizionario-Biografico%29/ |website=treccani.it |publisher=Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani |access-date=16 October 2023}}
Honours
rowspan=2 style="width:60px; vertical-align:top;" | File:Ordine coloniale della stella d'italia cavaliere gran croce.png | Knight Grand Cordon of the Colonial Order of the Star of Italy |
Principal works
Among Rossi’s principal works are:
- I principi fondamentali della rappresentanza politica (“The fundamental principles of political representation”) (1894)
- Sulla natura giuridica del diritto elettorale politico (“On the legal nature of political electoral law”) (1907)
- Bartolo da Sassoferrato nel diritto pubblico del suo tempo (“Bartolo da Sassoferrato in the public law of his time”) (1917)
- Programma del corso di diritto pubblico comparato (“Syllabus of the course on comparative public law”) (1926)
- Potere personale e potere rappresentativo nella "Sacra corona d'Ungheria" (”Personal power and representative power in the "Holy Crown of Hungary"”) (1934);
- Un criterio di logica giuridica: la regola e l'eccezione particolarmente nel diritto pubblico (“A criterion of legal logic: the rule and the exception particularly in public law”) (1935).
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://patrimonio.archivioluce.com/luce-web/detail/IL0000006381/10/ photograph of the future king Idris of Libya meeting Luigi Rossi in Rome, 1920]
- [https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/43203650.pdf?refreqid=fastly-default%3A336830dac3763be5a45ae5b763c66f29&ab_segments=&origin=&initiator=&acceptTC=1 Review of Studi di diritto costituzionale in memoria di Luigi Rossi, Paolo Biscaretti di Ruffia]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rossi, Luigi}}
{{Navbox
| name =Ministers of Italian Colonies
| title =Ministers of the Italian Colonies
| state = {{{state|autocollapse}}}
| listclass = hlist
| groupstyle = text-align:center;
| group1 = Ministers of the Colonies
(1912–37)
| list1 =
- Pietro Bertolini
- Ferdinando Martini
- Gaspare Colosimo
- Luigi Rossi
- Francesco Saverio Nitti
- Bartolomeo Meuccio Ruini
- Luigi Rossi
- Giuseppe Girardini
- Giovanni Amendola
- Luigi Federzoni
- Pietro Lanza di Scalea
- Luigi Federzoni
- Benito Mussolini
- Emilio De Bono
- Benito Mussolini
- Alessandro Lessona
| group2 = Ministers of Italian Africa
(1937–53)
| list2 =
- Alessandro Lessona
- Benito Mussolini
- Attilio Teruzzi
- Melchiade Gabba
- Pietro Badoglio
- Ivanoe Bonomi
- Ferruccio Parri
- Alcide De Gasperi
| below = Italics indicate interim minister
}}
Category:Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Kingdom of Italy)