This paper addresses the complex issue of attitudes toward foreigners in the early modern age, together with that of social control. Focusing on the case of Genoa, a Mediterranean port city in north-western Italy, it shows to what extent the norms and policies implemented in this domain followed a logic of economic interests and good governance, rather than an ideological one. It also highlights how a similar approach also concerned the poor, beggars, vagrants, and, more generally, people living on the margins, in a condition of “foreignness” who were thus considered as foreigners in their homeland.

Economic Interest and Good Government: Foreigners and Social Control in Early Modern Genoa

Maria Stella Rollandi;Andrea Zanini
2024-01-01

Abstract

This paper addresses the complex issue of attitudes toward foreigners in the early modern age, together with that of social control. Focusing on the case of Genoa, a Mediterranean port city in north-western Italy, it shows to what extent the norms and policies implemented in this domain followed a logic of economic interests and good governance, rather than an ideological one. It also highlights how a similar approach also concerned the poor, beggars, vagrants, and, more generally, people living on the margins, in a condition of “foreignness” who were thus considered as foreigners in their homeland.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1223695
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