Definitions of fascism
Fascism
Core tenets[show]Nationalism · Authoritarianism · Single party state · Dictatorship · Social Darwinism · Social interventionism · Indoctrination · Propaganda · Anti-intellectualism · Eugenics · Heroism · Militarism · Economic interventionism · Anti-communism
Topics[show]Definitions · Economics · Fascism and ideology · Fascism worldwide · Symbolism
Ideas[show]Class collaboration · Corporatism · Futurism · Heroic capitalism · National Socialism · National syndicalism · Populism · Self-sufficiency · State capitalism · State socialism · Statism · Supercapitalism · Totalitarianism · Yellow socialism
Movements[show]Arrow Cross Party · Austrofascism · Brazilian Integralism · British Union of Fascists · Falange · Iron Guard · Italian Fascism · Japanese fascism · Nazism · Rexism · Ustaše · Revisionist Maximalism
Para-Fascist:
Austrofascism · Estado Novo (Portugal) · 4th of August Regime · Francoist Spain · Imperial Rule Assistance Organization · Japanese statism · Baathism · Independent State of Croatia · Slovak State · Tacuara Nationalist Movement ·
People[show] Corneliu Zelea Codreanu
Heinrich Himmler
Adolf Hitler
Ikki Kita
Benito Mussolini
Giovanni Gentile
Ante Pavelić
Konstantin Rodzaevsky
Plínio Salgado
Works[show]The Doctrine of Fascism · Fascist manifesto · Mein Kampf · The Myth of the Twentieth Century · Zaveshchanie russkogo fashista
Organizations[show]Axis powers · Black Brigades · Blackshirts · Blueshirts · Blue Shirt Society · Redshirts · Fascist International · Grand Council of Fascism · Greenshirts · Italian Nationalist Association · Schutzstaffel · Sturmabteilung
History[show]Fascio · March on Rome · Beer Hall Putsch · Acerbo Law · Aventine Secession · Fascist Italy · Nazi Germany · March of the Iron Will · Congress of Verona · Italian Social Republic
Lists[show]Anti-fascists · British fascists · Fascists by country · Nazi ideologues
Related topics[show]Anti-fascism · Clerical fascism · Cryptofascism · Ecofascism · European fascist ideologies · Fascist (epithet) · Hitler salute · Left-wing fascism · Neo-Fascism · Quadrumvirs · Racism · Roman salute · Social fascism · Palingenetic ultranationalism
What constitutes a definition of fascism and fascist governments is a highly disputed subject that has proved complicated and contentious. Historians, political scientists, and other scholars have engaged in long and furious debates concerning the exact nature of fascism and its core tenets.
Most scholars agree that a "fascist regime" is foremost an authoritarian form of government, although not all authoritarian regimes are fascist. Authoritarianism is thus a defining characteristic, but most scholars will say that more distinguishing traits are needed to make an authoritarian regime fascist.
Similarly, fascism as an ideology is also hard to define. Originally, "fascism" referred to a political movement that was linked with Sindicalist-Corporativism that existed in a single country (Italy) for less than 30 years and ruled the country from 1922 to 1943 under the leadership of Benito Mussolini. Clearly, if the definition is restricted to the original Italian Fascism, then "fascism" has little significance outside of Italian politics. Most scholars prefer to use the word "fascism" in a more general sense, to refer to an ideology (or group of ideologies) that was influential in many countries at many different times. For this purpose, they have sought to identify a "fascist minimum" - that is, the minimum conditions that a certain political group must meet in order to be considered fascist. Several scholars have inspected the apocalyptic, millennial and millenarian aspects of fascism.According to most scholars of fascism, there are both left and right influences on fascism as a social movement, and fascism, especially once in power, has historically attacked communism, conservatism and parliamentary liberalism, attracting support primarily from the "far right" or "extreme right."
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