The management of the plague in Florence at the beginning of Renaissance: the role of the partnership between the Republic and the Confraternita of Misericordia

Manetti Giacomo, Bellucci Marco, Bagnoli Luca

The role of charities in the administration of healthcare and poverty and the use of accounting in their control mechanisms is a relatively unexplored topic in the accounting history literature. The present study aims to enrich the literature by studying how accounting systems were used in the management of the plague by a charity organization – the Confraternita of Misericordia – during the first decades of the Renaissance in Florence, focusing on the role of the partnership between the Republic of Florence and the Misericordia. This research is the result of the analysis of rare documents, statutes, and account books concerning the administration of the Misericordia from 1490 to 1530. Our analysis employs ideas on institutional theory, Foucault’s theories on the “government of the poor,” and Dean’s thoughts on “technologies of government” and “policing the poor.”

 Key-Words: Rapporti pubblico-privato, plague, Renaissance, Florence, Misericordia, institutional theory, accounting, government of the poor, technologies of government