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Incomplete Italy key revision topics

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Italy breakdown of topics
Italy up to 1911 ●​ Social, economic and political issues before 1911
○​ Economic
■​ Northern Italy industrialising and modernising and Southern Italy
Giolitti 1911-1914 remaining economically backward
■​ Limited industrial development drew people to northern cities,
increasing the potential for radicalisation
■​ Industry was restricted to the North
■​ In 1911 Milian, Genoa, Turin accounted for 55% of industrial
income
■​ Exports increased a rate of 4.5% and the numbers of workers
increased by 2 million between 1901 and 1911
○​ Political
■​ Political systems controlled by a small elite drawn from the middle
& upper classes
■​ Opening up of the franchise in 1883 and 1912 meant many who
did not support the liberals could vote - making italian politics
more unstable and difficult to manage for experienced politicians
who operated within the system for decades
■​ Became harder to form coalitions and keep them as support for
socialist, catholic and radical parties grew
■​ From 1910, nationalist groups also joined
■​ Transformismo - govs formed factions to make coalitions
■​ Between 1870 and 1915 there were more than 20 different
governments
○​ Social
■​ Systemic poverty, unrest and the huge divide between the north
and south made Italy hard to govern
■​ With the increase of the franchise people whose situation and
views could be safely ignored now had a political voice and
weren’t inclined to vote liberal
■​ Emigration was increasing
■​ 1870 69% were illiterate
■​ In piedmont there were 26 schools for every 10,000 inhabitants
whereas only 6 per 10,000 in Sicily
●​ Italy as a great power
○​ Italy desired to be a great power equal of Britain and France, Germany
○​ Colonial ambitions
■​ Disastrous early attempts - Tunisia 1881 and Abyssnia in 1896
■​ Italy's defeat to Abyssinian forces in Adowa was humaltiing - had
to accept Abyssinian independence and pay 10 million lire in war
reparations
●​ Giolitti’s social and economic reforms -
○​ Social
■​ Sickness, accident and pension schemes
■​ Raising minimum working age to 12 years
■​ Compulsory accident insurance in industrial work paid for by the
employer
■​ Limiting working day for woman to 11 hours 1902
■​ 1913 state subsidised sickness and old age fund for merchant and
navy introduced
■​ Federation of agricultural workers was formed in 1901 and
represented 240,000 workers
○​ Economic
■​ 1906 - non-intervention in labour disputes and establishment of
arbitration courts which would settle pay disputes between
employers and workers - lowering need for strike action
■​ wages rose by 25% by 1913
○​ Police left unreformed and tended to support elites against workers
○​ Giolitti prioritise economic production goals over workers grievances -
radicalisation

●​ Foreign Policy / Libyan War
○​ Mussolini orders pacification - lock opposition in concentration
camps and exterminate them
○​ 100,000 Libyan tribesmen rounded up and forced to walk in the
desert, most women, children, elderly and most died
○​ The PSI was growing rapidly during this period and the views in
Avanti represented those of the party members
○​ Giolitti’s intention to use the invasion of Libya to reduce opposition,
and to unite the country in support of the government, failed

, ○​ Mussolini, then a member of the PSI, campaigned for a general strike
to demonstrate opposition to the war.
○​ Nationalists took credit for the success of Libya undermine Giolitti's
power

●​ Extension of the franchise
●​ Growth of nationalism/socialism
●​ 1913 Election
●​ Gentiloni Pact
●​ Giolitti’s Resignation
●​ Relationship with Catholics, socialists and nationalists
○​ Catholics
■​ Allowed for the divorce bill which was close to
passing to disappear - compromises with
catholics and nationalists
■​ Catholics part of governing coalitions in Turin,
Bologna, Florence and Venice
■​ Not prepared to give concessions on the roman
question - tensions between church and state
○​ Socialists
■​ 1909 encouraging italians to vote in the 150 constituiences
where socialists had a chance of winning
■​ Most important concession to socialists in 1906 - policy of
non-intervention in labour disputes
■​ Giolitti did manage to neutralise the socialist threat by
making key concessions to the movement
■​ Implementing reforms to increase literacy and healthcare
■​ Increasing wages
■​ Wages increased by 40% between 1900 and 1915
■​ 1. Abolished child labour
■​ 2. Social insurance and pensions
■​ 3. Maternity pay
■​ 4. Spending on infrastructure increased 50%
■​ 5. Took money away from armed forces
■​ 6. Kept govt neutral in industrial disputes (allowed
workers/trade unions to bargain for higher wages)
●​ Less violence than in 1890s and plans for
revolution muted
●​ Social and economic reforms to help the poorest
in Italy
●​ Persuaded some Socialists to join him
■​ Demonstrating why Giolitti was able to minimise the
socialist threat to liberal Italy.
■​ HOWEVER: The impact of these changes were limited
because:
■​ Giolitti ultimately prioritised economic efficiency over
welfare of workers
■​ This can be demonstrated by:
■​ PSI declared a strike in June 1914
■​ Became violent as trade unions seized control of buildings
and factories
■​ Known as red week
■​ Military had to be used to maintain order
■​ This shows that: PSI was unwilling to work within
democratic system
■​ Socialism becoming more extreme
■​ PSI was internally divided - moderates were on board, but
extreme members believed they were betraying the
Socialist cause and were more influential within the party
■​ The impact of this was:
■​ Failed to prevent the growth of trade unions and strikes
■​ Members of the elite believed Giolitti had made too many
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