Since the beginning of the twentieth century, Italian public law had to recognize to Santi Romano the merit of having worked out, from international law to constitutional law, from administrative law to ecclesiastical law, up to colonial law, a general legal theory firmly built on the concept of State. But after L’ordinamento giuridico, Romano’s perspective appeared suddenly changed, more articulated, so much so that it came out from his early model in several respects. The exposition was raised, programmatically seeking a more abstract and general plan, at least apparently freed from the pressures of the present time. The State remained the final goal of historical development, the most perfected and complete example of a legal system. But it came down for the first time from his podium.
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