Between needs and resignation. The Neapolitan Federation of Onmi during the Second World War 1939-1943

Journal title ITALIA CONTEMPORANEA
Author/s Domenica La Banca
Publishing Year 2011 Issue 2010/260 Language Italian
Pages 21 P. 404-424 File size 319 KB
DOI 10.3280/IC2010-260003
DOI is like a bar code for intellectual property: to have more infomation click here

Below, you can see the article first page

If you want to buy this article in PDF format, you can do it, following the instructions to buy download credits

Article preview

FrancoAngeli is member of Publishers International Linking Association, Inc (PILA), a not-for-profit association which run the CrossRef service enabling links to and from online scholarly content.

The National Organization for the Protection of Motherhood and Infancy (Onmi), created in 1925, was the first and foremost Italian state-controlled agency operating in the field of social care during the Fascist era. Seeing how this organization worked in the years of the Second World War allows us to understand to what extent Fascism brought to effect the ambitious welfare policies so magniloquently boasted by the regime propaganda, all the more in times when they were called to prove really reliable and efficient. An assessment is drawn, in this essay, through the test case of the Neapolitan Federation of Onmi, whose story is examined as for the period 1939-1943. The achievements of Onmi in Naples appear significantly poor. Italy went to war not only without due economic and military preparation, but also lacking in social and relief services for the civilian population at large. In Naples these deficiencies were exasperated by both the straitened circumstances of total war (insufficient funding, food shortage) and the shortcomings and lags that the local Federation of Onmi had already accumulated prior to the world conflict. In this depressing scene the only exception appears to have been the dynamic and proactive attention the local Federation showed in carrying out the demographic policy by combating neonatal mortality as well as by protecting illegitimate children through the institution of fosterage.

Keywords: Motherhood, infancy, Naples, Fascism, Second World War, welfare, demographic policy

Domenica La Banca, Tra bisogni e rassegnazione. La Federazione napoletana dell’Onmi durante la seconda guerra 1939-1943 in "ITALIA CONTEMPORANEA" 260/2010, pp 404-424, DOI: 10.3280/IC2010-260003