Legislating for deviancy in the shadows: Treatment for ‘dementes’ and ‘locos’ from 1870 to 1931

dc.contributor.authorFranco-Chasán, José
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-29T18:38:10Z
dc.date.available2025-01-29T18:38:10Z
dc.date.issued2023-10-20
dc.descriptionSummary:1. Introduction. 2. Normative development. 2.1. Criminal Codes. 2.1.1. Criminal Code of 1870. 2.1.2. Criminal Code of 1928. 2.1.3. Criminal Code of 1932. 2.1.4. Criminal Code of 1944. 2.2.Complementary laws: royal decrees, decrees, royal orders, and ministerial orders. 2.2.1.The Royal Decree of 1885 (12thMay): theLeganésDecree. 2.2.2.The Royal Decree of 1885 (19thMay): State, provincial and municipal sanatoriums. 2.2.3. The Royal Order of 1887 (28thJanuary): Petition of amendment. 2.2.4. The Royal Order of 1903 (26thNovember): clarification of art. 5. 2.2.5.The Royal Order of 1908 (25thMarch): De La Cierva Order. 2.2.6. The Decree of 1931 (3rdJuly): on the Assistance of the Mentally Ill. 2.2.7. The Ministerial Order of 1932 (16thMay): on the Education of Psychiatric Nurses. 3. Specific jurisdictions. 3.1.War Navy Code. 3.2. Code of Military Justice. 4.Law and practice: the reality behind the application of the laws. 4.1. A change in society’s mindset: doctrinal shift. 4.2. The case-law of the Supreme Court: struggling for authority. 5. Concluding considerations. Bibliographical references
dc.description.abstractThe current article analyses the Spanish legislation regarding the treatment of insane offenders. In this normative study, various legal sources have been outlined: criminal codes, decrees, royal decrees, royal orders, ministerial orders, the War Navy Code, and the Code of Military Justice, among others. However, this approach tries to put legislation in context, since most of the evolution of the legislation is due to doctrine and case-law. Indeed, the fundamental change takes place in 1931, but this must be put into perspective and connected to the often forgotten, aforementioned sources of the law.
dc.identifier.citationFranco-Chasán, J. (2023). Legislating for deviancy in the shadows: Treatment for ’dementes’ and ’locos’ from 1870 to 1931. GLOSSAE. European Journal of Legal History, (20), pp. 144–178. Recuperado a partir de https://www.glossae.eu/glossaeojs/article/view/587
dc.identifier.issn0214-669X (Impreso)
dc.identifier.issn2255-2707 (Online)
dc.identifier.otherhttps://www.glossae.eu/glossaeojs/article/view/587
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10115/69977
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherInstituto de Estudios Sociales, Políticos y Jurídicos, Fundación Universitas. GLOSSAE
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internationalen
dc.rights.accessRightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.subjectinsane offenders
dc.subjectdementes
dc.subjectlocos
dc.subjectalienated
dc.subjectcriminal responsability
dc.subjectdangerousness
dc.subjectforensic doctors
dc.subjectpsychiatry
dc.subjectinsanity
dc.subjectmentally ill
dc.subjectconfinement
dc.titleLegislating for deviancy in the shadows: Treatment for ‘dementes’ and ‘locos’ from 1870 to 1931
dc.typeArticle

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