This book examines two defining moments in Italys confrontation with the mafia through a combined sociological and historical lens, focusing on four individuals who played key roles in reshaping the nations response to organized crime. The story begins with Pio La Torre, a Sicilian communist deputy, and Carlo Alberto dalla Chiesa, a Carabinieri general from Northern Italy - both assassinated in 1982 for their efforts to challenge mafia power. Their murders precipitated a decisive turning point: the approval of Italys first comprehensive antimafia legislation. The narrative then turns to the landmark investigations of judges Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, childhood friends from Palermos Kalsa district, whose murders in 1992 unleashed a nationwide mobilization and prompted a second major legislative and organizational offensive against organized crime.
By integrating criminological analysis with political and social history, the book explores how state institutions, civil society, and individual agency converged to end a period of mafia impunity. It offers crucial insights into the genesis and evolution of antimafia legislation, the role of education in promoting legality, and Italys transformation from a symbol of entrenched organized crime into a global model of democratic resistance.
Chapter
1. THE HEROES: MAFIA AND ANTI-MAFIA.
Chapter
2. THE ANTIMAFIA
MOVEMENT.
Chapter
3. PIO LA TORRE. THE COMMUNIST.
Chapter
4. CARLO ALBERTO
DALLA CHIESA. THE GENERAL.
Chapter
5. GIOVANNI FALCONE. THE PREDESTINED
VICTIM.
Chapter
6. PAOLO BORSELLINO. THE FINAL VICTIM.
Chapter
7. PARALLEL
LIVES. TOGETHER AND DIFFERENT: AN ATTEMPT AT COMPARISON.
Chapter
8. AGAINST
THE MAFIA. CONCLUDING NOTES: BIOGRAPHIES,LEGALITY, MEMORY.
Nando dalla Chiesa is Professor of Sociology of Organized Crime and a leading authority on mafia studies. A former three-term member of the Italian Parliament, he is also an accomplished writer, having authored 49 books, most of which focus on the mafia, legality, and civil resistance. For many years, he has also undertaken extensive teaching and scholarly activities abroad, with a particular focus on several countries across Latin America. He serves as the honorary president of Libera, the worlds most prominent antimafia association, championing education and social justice.