Abstract
The article traces the theoretical lines along which anarchist thought has developed concerning the criminal question and punishment. Every libertarian model of social organization faces the challenges of deviance, responding to crime as an offense against fundamental goods, and conflict. Starting from Stirner, who envisions an informal system of collective defense within the association of the egoists, the author examines arguments at the intersection of criminal philosophy and the theory of the State and society as expressed by Bakunin, Kropotkin, Malatesta, Molinari, Proudhon, Guyau e Godwin.
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