Latin American International Law in the Twenty-First Century
Herausgeber: Chehtman, Alejandro; Puig, Sergio; Huneeus, Alexandra
Latin American International Law in the Twenty-First Century
Herausgeber: Chehtman, Alejandro; Puig, Sergio; Huneeus, Alexandra
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This broad survey of Latin America's contributions to international law spans centuries and subject areas, providing detailed analysis by a group of renowned and emerging scholars. Covering entrenched doctrines as well as developing areas, like Indigenous rights and anti-corruption measures, the book offers a thorough exploration of Latin American international law.
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This broad survey of Latin America's contributions to international law spans centuries and subject areas, providing detailed analysis by a group of renowned and emerging scholars. Covering entrenched doctrines as well as developing areas, like Indigenous rights and anti-corruption measures, the book offers a thorough exploration of Latin American international law.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 696
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. März 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 160mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1111g
- ISBN-13: 9780197753989
- ISBN-10: 0197753981
- Artikelnr.: 73664901
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 696
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. März 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 160mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1111g
- ISBN-13: 9780197753989
- ISBN-10: 0197753981
- Artikelnr.: 73664901
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Alejandro Chehtman is Dean and Professor of Law, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella, Argentina, and Executive Director of the Latin American Society for International Law. Originally from Argentina, with degrees from UBA and the LSE, Chehtman writes mainly on international criminal law, international humanitarian law, and transitional justice, with a focus on philosophical and empirical approaches. Alexandra Huneeus is Evjue Bascom Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Law, Society and Justice at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Originally from Chile, Huneeus grew up in the US, studied at UC Berkeley, and writes about international law, rights movements, and courts, with a focus on Latin America. Sergio Puig is Chair in International Economic Law at the European University Institute and Evo DeConcini Professor of Law at UArizona. He is Co-Editor in Chief of the Journal of International Economic Law and a board member of the American Journal of International Law. Originally from Mexico, with degrees from ITAM and Stanford, Puig writes mainly on international trade and investment law, business and human rights, international courts, and empirical legal studies.
* PART I. History
* 1: Pablo Mijangos y González: The Spanish American Concordats
(1821-1875)
* 2: Louise Fawcett: Early Internationalists: Bello, Calvo, and Álvarez
and Beyond
* 3: Fabia Fernandes Carvalho: Nonintervention, Nonrecognition, and the
Articulation of a Mexican Doctrine of International Law: Assessing
the Contribution of Isidro Fabela and Genaro Estrada
* 4: Juan Pablo Scarfi: The Montevideo Convention and Its Predecessors
* 5: Arnulf Becker Lorca and Amaya Álvez Marín: Turning International
Law against Indigenous Peoples
* 6: Steven L. B. Jensen and Kathryn Sikkink: Latin American and
Caribbean Contributions to Human Rights Law
* PART II. Theories and Methods
* 7: Sergio Puig: Interdisciplinarity and LAIL: The Case of
International Economic Law
* 8: Mariana Mota Prado: Law and Development in/from Latin America
* 9: René Urueña: Technoscientific Thought and International Law in
Latin America
* 10: George Rodrigo Bandeira Galindo: Critical Approaches to
International Law in Latin America
* 11: Ana Micaela Alterio: Feminisms and International Law in Latin
America: The Dispute over Protection of Women's Rights in the
Inter-American Human Rights System
* 12: Roberto Gargarella: Democracy, Legitimacy, and Authority in
International Courts
* 13: Ximena Fuentes: Positivism and Latin American Developments in
International Law
* PART III. Institutions and Practice
* 14: Eduardo Valencia-Ospina and Giovanny Vega-Barbosa: The Latin
American States and the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes before the
International Court of Justice: Toward Confidence as the Contemporary
Pattern
* 15: Elizabeth Salmón: International Humanitarian Law in Latin
America: The Role of Truth Commissions
* 16: Manuel A. Gómez: The Dynamic Relationship between Latin American
Legal Professionals and International Law: Two Contemporary Examples
* 17: Mónica Pinto: Education in International Law in Latin America
* 18: David Landau: Local Politics and Regional Rights: Reflections on
Comparative International Law in the Americas
* 19: Jorge Contesse: The Human Rights Institutions of Latin America
* PART IV. New Doctrines
* 20: Claudio Grossman Guiloff: Contributions of Latin America to
International Law: Reparations for Human Rights Violations
* 21: Alejandro Chehtman: Latin America as a Laboratory of Transitional
Justice
* 22: Maryluz Barragan Gonzalez: The Racial Dimension of Latin American
International Law
* 23: Lina M. Céspedes-Báez, Enrique Prieto-Rios, Mónica
Mazariegos-Rodas: Community of Practice and the Ius Constitutionale
Commune en América Latina
* 24: María Teresa Infante Caffi: Maritime Delimitation in Latin
America
* 25: Fernando Lusa Bordin and Federica Paddeu: Latin America and the
Codification of the Law of State Responsibility: A Tale of Juridical
Equality and Nonintervention
* PART V. Contemporary Challenges
* 26: Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos and Wayne Sandholtz: Corruption and
International Law in Latin America: From the Washington Consensus to
Human Rights
* 27: Helena Alviar García and Laura Betancur-Restrepo: Strategic Uses
of International Law in Peace Negotiations in Colombia
* 28: Beatriz Garcia: The Promise of Environmental Cooperation in Latin
America: Enhancing Forest Conservation through Sustainable Supply
Chains
* 29: Alexandra Huneeus: Can the Inter-American Court Tip Us toward
Climate Justice?
* 30: Pedro A. Villarreal: Health Law and Pandemics in Latin America
* 31: Rodrigo Polanco: Latin America and the Regulation of Internet and
Digital Trade
* 32: Alejandro Chehtman, Alexandra Huneeus, and Sergio Puig: Epilogue:
The Birth of a New Canon in Latin American International Law
* 1: Pablo Mijangos y González: The Spanish American Concordats
(1821-1875)
* 2: Louise Fawcett: Early Internationalists: Bello, Calvo, and Álvarez
and Beyond
* 3: Fabia Fernandes Carvalho: Nonintervention, Nonrecognition, and the
Articulation of a Mexican Doctrine of International Law: Assessing
the Contribution of Isidro Fabela and Genaro Estrada
* 4: Juan Pablo Scarfi: The Montevideo Convention and Its Predecessors
* 5: Arnulf Becker Lorca and Amaya Álvez Marín: Turning International
Law against Indigenous Peoples
* 6: Steven L. B. Jensen and Kathryn Sikkink: Latin American and
Caribbean Contributions to Human Rights Law
* PART II. Theories and Methods
* 7: Sergio Puig: Interdisciplinarity and LAIL: The Case of
International Economic Law
* 8: Mariana Mota Prado: Law and Development in/from Latin America
* 9: René Urueña: Technoscientific Thought and International Law in
Latin America
* 10: George Rodrigo Bandeira Galindo: Critical Approaches to
International Law in Latin America
* 11: Ana Micaela Alterio: Feminisms and International Law in Latin
America: The Dispute over Protection of Women's Rights in the
Inter-American Human Rights System
* 12: Roberto Gargarella: Democracy, Legitimacy, and Authority in
International Courts
* 13: Ximena Fuentes: Positivism and Latin American Developments in
International Law
* PART III. Institutions and Practice
* 14: Eduardo Valencia-Ospina and Giovanny Vega-Barbosa: The Latin
American States and the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes before the
International Court of Justice: Toward Confidence as the Contemporary
Pattern
* 15: Elizabeth Salmón: International Humanitarian Law in Latin
America: The Role of Truth Commissions
* 16: Manuel A. Gómez: The Dynamic Relationship between Latin American
Legal Professionals and International Law: Two Contemporary Examples
* 17: Mónica Pinto: Education in International Law in Latin America
* 18: David Landau: Local Politics and Regional Rights: Reflections on
Comparative International Law in the Americas
* 19: Jorge Contesse: The Human Rights Institutions of Latin America
* PART IV. New Doctrines
* 20: Claudio Grossman Guiloff: Contributions of Latin America to
International Law: Reparations for Human Rights Violations
* 21: Alejandro Chehtman: Latin America as a Laboratory of Transitional
Justice
* 22: Maryluz Barragan Gonzalez: The Racial Dimension of Latin American
International Law
* 23: Lina M. Céspedes-Báez, Enrique Prieto-Rios, Mónica
Mazariegos-Rodas: Community of Practice and the Ius Constitutionale
Commune en América Latina
* 24: María Teresa Infante Caffi: Maritime Delimitation in Latin
America
* 25: Fernando Lusa Bordin and Federica Paddeu: Latin America and the
Codification of the Law of State Responsibility: A Tale of Juridical
Equality and Nonintervention
* PART V. Contemporary Challenges
* 26: Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos and Wayne Sandholtz: Corruption and
International Law in Latin America: From the Washington Consensus to
Human Rights
* 27: Helena Alviar García and Laura Betancur-Restrepo: Strategic Uses
of International Law in Peace Negotiations in Colombia
* 28: Beatriz Garcia: The Promise of Environmental Cooperation in Latin
America: Enhancing Forest Conservation through Sustainable Supply
Chains
* 29: Alexandra Huneeus: Can the Inter-American Court Tip Us toward
Climate Justice?
* 30: Pedro A. Villarreal: Health Law and Pandemics in Latin America
* 31: Rodrigo Polanco: Latin America and the Regulation of Internet and
Digital Trade
* 32: Alejandro Chehtman, Alexandra Huneeus, and Sergio Puig: Epilogue:
The Birth of a New Canon in Latin American International Law
* PART I. History
* 1: Pablo Mijangos y González: The Spanish American Concordats
(1821-1875)
* 2: Louise Fawcett: Early Internationalists: Bello, Calvo, and Álvarez
and Beyond
* 3: Fabia Fernandes Carvalho: Nonintervention, Nonrecognition, and the
Articulation of a Mexican Doctrine of International Law: Assessing
the Contribution of Isidro Fabela and Genaro Estrada
* 4: Juan Pablo Scarfi: The Montevideo Convention and Its Predecessors
* 5: Arnulf Becker Lorca and Amaya Álvez Marín: Turning International
Law against Indigenous Peoples
* 6: Steven L. B. Jensen and Kathryn Sikkink: Latin American and
Caribbean Contributions to Human Rights Law
* PART II. Theories and Methods
* 7: Sergio Puig: Interdisciplinarity and LAIL: The Case of
International Economic Law
* 8: Mariana Mota Prado: Law and Development in/from Latin America
* 9: René Urueña: Technoscientific Thought and International Law in
Latin America
* 10: George Rodrigo Bandeira Galindo: Critical Approaches to
International Law in Latin America
* 11: Ana Micaela Alterio: Feminisms and International Law in Latin
America: The Dispute over Protection of Women's Rights in the
Inter-American Human Rights System
* 12: Roberto Gargarella: Democracy, Legitimacy, and Authority in
International Courts
* 13: Ximena Fuentes: Positivism and Latin American Developments in
International Law
* PART III. Institutions and Practice
* 14: Eduardo Valencia-Ospina and Giovanny Vega-Barbosa: The Latin
American States and the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes before the
International Court of Justice: Toward Confidence as the Contemporary
Pattern
* 15: Elizabeth Salmón: International Humanitarian Law in Latin
America: The Role of Truth Commissions
* 16: Manuel A. Gómez: The Dynamic Relationship between Latin American
Legal Professionals and International Law: Two Contemporary Examples
* 17: Mónica Pinto: Education in International Law in Latin America
* 18: David Landau: Local Politics and Regional Rights: Reflections on
Comparative International Law in the Americas
* 19: Jorge Contesse: The Human Rights Institutions of Latin America
* PART IV. New Doctrines
* 20: Claudio Grossman Guiloff: Contributions of Latin America to
International Law: Reparations for Human Rights Violations
* 21: Alejandro Chehtman: Latin America as a Laboratory of Transitional
Justice
* 22: Maryluz Barragan Gonzalez: The Racial Dimension of Latin American
International Law
* 23: Lina M. Céspedes-Báez, Enrique Prieto-Rios, Mónica
Mazariegos-Rodas: Community of Practice and the Ius Constitutionale
Commune en América Latina
* 24: María Teresa Infante Caffi: Maritime Delimitation in Latin
America
* 25: Fernando Lusa Bordin and Federica Paddeu: Latin America and the
Codification of the Law of State Responsibility: A Tale of Juridical
Equality and Nonintervention
* PART V. Contemporary Challenges
* 26: Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos and Wayne Sandholtz: Corruption and
International Law in Latin America: From the Washington Consensus to
Human Rights
* 27: Helena Alviar García and Laura Betancur-Restrepo: Strategic Uses
of International Law in Peace Negotiations in Colombia
* 28: Beatriz Garcia: The Promise of Environmental Cooperation in Latin
America: Enhancing Forest Conservation through Sustainable Supply
Chains
* 29: Alexandra Huneeus: Can the Inter-American Court Tip Us toward
Climate Justice?
* 30: Pedro A. Villarreal: Health Law and Pandemics in Latin America
* 31: Rodrigo Polanco: Latin America and the Regulation of Internet and
Digital Trade
* 32: Alejandro Chehtman, Alexandra Huneeus, and Sergio Puig: Epilogue:
The Birth of a New Canon in Latin American International Law
* 1: Pablo Mijangos y González: The Spanish American Concordats
(1821-1875)
* 2: Louise Fawcett: Early Internationalists: Bello, Calvo, and Álvarez
and Beyond
* 3: Fabia Fernandes Carvalho: Nonintervention, Nonrecognition, and the
Articulation of a Mexican Doctrine of International Law: Assessing
the Contribution of Isidro Fabela and Genaro Estrada
* 4: Juan Pablo Scarfi: The Montevideo Convention and Its Predecessors
* 5: Arnulf Becker Lorca and Amaya Álvez Marín: Turning International
Law against Indigenous Peoples
* 6: Steven L. B. Jensen and Kathryn Sikkink: Latin American and
Caribbean Contributions to Human Rights Law
* PART II. Theories and Methods
* 7: Sergio Puig: Interdisciplinarity and LAIL: The Case of
International Economic Law
* 8: Mariana Mota Prado: Law and Development in/from Latin America
* 9: René Urueña: Technoscientific Thought and International Law in
Latin America
* 10: George Rodrigo Bandeira Galindo: Critical Approaches to
International Law in Latin America
* 11: Ana Micaela Alterio: Feminisms and International Law in Latin
America: The Dispute over Protection of Women's Rights in the
Inter-American Human Rights System
* 12: Roberto Gargarella: Democracy, Legitimacy, and Authority in
International Courts
* 13: Ximena Fuentes: Positivism and Latin American Developments in
International Law
* PART III. Institutions and Practice
* 14: Eduardo Valencia-Ospina and Giovanny Vega-Barbosa: The Latin
American States and the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes before the
International Court of Justice: Toward Confidence as the Contemporary
Pattern
* 15: Elizabeth Salmón: International Humanitarian Law in Latin
America: The Role of Truth Commissions
* 16: Manuel A. Gómez: The Dynamic Relationship between Latin American
Legal Professionals and International Law: Two Contemporary Examples
* 17: Mónica Pinto: Education in International Law in Latin America
* 18: David Landau: Local Politics and Regional Rights: Reflections on
Comparative International Law in the Americas
* 19: Jorge Contesse: The Human Rights Institutions of Latin America
* PART IV. New Doctrines
* 20: Claudio Grossman Guiloff: Contributions of Latin America to
International Law: Reparations for Human Rights Violations
* 21: Alejandro Chehtman: Latin America as a Laboratory of Transitional
Justice
* 22: Maryluz Barragan Gonzalez: The Racial Dimension of Latin American
International Law
* 23: Lina M. Céspedes-Báez, Enrique Prieto-Rios, Mónica
Mazariegos-Rodas: Community of Practice and the Ius Constitutionale
Commune en América Latina
* 24: María Teresa Infante Caffi: Maritime Delimitation in Latin
America
* 25: Fernando Lusa Bordin and Federica Paddeu: Latin America and the
Codification of the Law of State Responsibility: A Tale of Juridical
Equality and Nonintervention
* PART V. Contemporary Challenges
* 26: Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos and Wayne Sandholtz: Corruption and
International Law in Latin America: From the Washington Consensus to
Human Rights
* 27: Helena Alviar García and Laura Betancur-Restrepo: Strategic Uses
of International Law in Peace Negotiations in Colombia
* 28: Beatriz Garcia: The Promise of Environmental Cooperation in Latin
America: Enhancing Forest Conservation through Sustainable Supply
Chains
* 29: Alexandra Huneeus: Can the Inter-American Court Tip Us toward
Climate Justice?
* 30: Pedro A. Villarreal: Health Law and Pandemics in Latin America
* 31: Rodrigo Polanco: Latin America and the Regulation of Internet and
Digital Trade
* 32: Alejandro Chehtman, Alexandra Huneeus, and Sergio Puig: Epilogue:
The Birth of a New Canon in Latin American International Law







