CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY. 619 



France: MM. Dr. Lacassague, Delegate of the Society of Anthropology at Lyons. 

 Dr. Letourueau, Delegate of the Society of Anthroplogy of Paris. 



Hawaii: M. H. de Varigny. 



Holland: M. Hamel (van), Professor of the Law Faculty of Amsterdam. 



Italy: Hakim, (John), President of the Italian Committee at the Exposition of 

 Paris. 



Mexico: M. E. Raphael de Zayas Enrlquez. 



Paraguay: M. Dr. Hassler. 



Peru: MM. Dr. Muniz, Surgeon of the Army in Peru. 



Eoumania : M. Dr. Iscovesco ; Dr. Soutzo, Professor of Legal Medicine at the Fac- 

 ulty of Medicine at Bucharest. 



Russia: M. Dr. W. de Dekterew, Delegate of the Society of Public Hygiene, of 

 Moscow. 



Servia : Milenko Vesnitch, Doctor of Law. 



Sweden: M. Dr. Gr. Retzius, Delegate of the Society of Anthropology of Stockholm. 



There were tweiity-two countries, represented by 192 delegates. At 

 the opening session addresses were made. First, a welcome by the 

 Minister of Justice, by Dr. Brouardel, and Dr. Th. Roussel, which were 

 responded to on behalf of the foreign delegates by M. Moleschott, presi- 

 dent of the Congress at Rome. The meetings, after the opening session, 

 were held in the amphitheater of the Faculty of Medicine, the same 

 place as had been held the Congress of Hygiene and Demography. 



The questions proposed by the committee of organization to be dis- 

 cussed by the Congress were as follows, the preparation of papers 

 thereon having been assigned to the persons whose names respectively 

 follow them : 



The first series : 



Section I.— Criminal Biology. 



I. The Latest Discoveries in Criminal Anthropology. Prof. Ces. Lombroso, 

 University of Turin, and Prof. L. Teuchini, University of Parma. 

 II. Do Criminals Present any Peculiar Anatomic Characters? If so, how can 

 we discover them? Dr. Manouvrier, professor of the School of Anthro- 

 pology of Paris. 



III. Establishment of General Rules for Investigating the Occupants of our 



Prisons and Insane Asylums by means of Anthropometry or Psycholoay. 

 Prof. Sciamanna, of Rome, and Lawyer Virgilio Rossi. 



IV. The Determining Conditions of Crime and their Relative Values. Prof. E. 



Ferri, deputy Italian Parliament and professor of Criminal Law. 

 V. The Infancy of Criminals Considered in its Relation to Predisposition to 

 Crime. MM. Prof. Romeo Taverni, Catania, and Dr. Maguan, Director 

 of the Asylum, St. Anne. 

 VI. Organs and Functions among Criminals. MM. Dr. Frigerio, of Alexandria, 

 and Dr. Ottolenghi, of Turin. 



Section II.— Crime in its Relation to Sociology. 



VII. The Determination by Means of Criminal Anthropology of the Various 

 Classes of Delinquents. Baron Garofalo, president of the Civil Tribunal, 

 Naples. 

 VIII. Conditional Liberation. Dr. Semal, director of the State Insane Asylum, 

 Mons, Belgium. 

 IX. Crime in its Relation to Ethnography. Dr. Alvarez Taladriz, Madrid. 



