Integralism
Encyclopedia : I : IN : INT : Integralism
| Part of the Politics series on Fascism
|
|
Definition Definitions of fascism Varieties and derivatives of fascism Italian fascism Nazism Neo-Fascism Rexism Falangism Ustaše Clerical fascism Austrofascism Crypto-fascism Japanese fascism Greek fascism Brazilian Integralism Fascist political parties and movements Fascism as an international phenomenon List of fascist movements by country
Fascism in history
Relevant lists
Related subjects
|
| · |
Integralism is a belief that society is an organic unity. It has a characteristic belief in social hierarchy and in co-operation between the social classes and transending the conflict between economic groups. It usually advocates corporatism as the form of economics in an "organic society". Often seen as a belief in blood and soil conservatism, Integralism claims that the best political institutions for given nations will differ depending on the history, culture and climate of the nation's habitat. Integralism usually strongly supports a national church, or Erastianism (Gallicanism in French context). The movement is particularly associated with the French Action Française movement founded by Charles Maurras.
Integralism often overlaps with fascism (especially in Latin America), although there exist many natural points of disagreement, especially the integralist stress on localism.
See also
- Action Française
- Brazilian Integralism
- Cercle Proudhon
- Croix de Feu
- Falange
- Integralismo Lusitano
- National Syndicalism
- Estado Novo (Portugal)
- National Syndicalists (Portugal)
- Frank Visser
- Volksgemeinschaft
External links
- [Integralism and Perennialism] - Frank Visser
- [Integral Tradition]
- [Anarchist Integralism]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
