ABSTRACT

Central to this book is the assertion that fascist regimes similar in ideology and style to Mussolini's in Italy have arisen and will continue to arise in the underdeveloped world. The author views fascism as a definite response—authoritarian corporatist nationalism—to certain problems common to late-developing nations, not as an aberration that ca

part |93 pages

Part One

chapter 2|28 pages

Italy before Fascism

chapter 3|18 pages

The Ideology of Fascism

chapter 4|12 pages

The Mussolini Regime

chapter 5|12 pages

European Variants: Spain

chapter 6|7 pages

European Variants: Eastern Europe

part |114 pages

Part Two

chapter 7|23 pages

Modernization: The Challenge

chapter 8|12 pages

Militarism: The Response

chapter 9|11 pages

Communism and Modernization

chapter 10|11 pages

Japan: An Asian Road to Fascism

chapter 11|8 pages

Argentina: Proletarian Fascism

chapter 12|10 pages

Ghana: An African Variant

chapter 13|8 pages

Egypt: The Army and the Radical Revolution

chapter 15|8 pages

Peru: The Army and the Moderate Revolution

chapter 16|10 pages

Conclusions