A systematic analysis by Lefebvre D’Ovidio of Mussolini’s foreign policy since the March on Rome up to the eve of the Great Depression in the diplomatic context of all the main international questions debated after World War I. The relationship between Mussolini’s foreign policy and his reforms of the Italian ministries is also examined with particular attention paid to the role played by Mussolini’s vision of the position of fascist Italy in the world, Contarini’s liberal-national influence in the first years after the March on Rome and the pressure of the PNF for a radical fascistization of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. Grandi was the solution adopted by the «Duce» to fascistize the «machine» of Palazzo Chigi strengthening the predominance of the State on the PNF
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