facebook  twitter YouTube

Plataforma Iberoamericana en La Haya para la paz, los derechos humanos y la justicia internacional

07 Dic 25
Imprimir Correo electrónico
Escrito por webmaster

Volumen 53. The Trilogy on the Role of the International Criminal Court from non-Positivist Perspectives. Part III. Approaches that Denounce Modernity and its Subjectivities: Critical Studies and Historical-Contextual Approaches as Axis of Analysis

Special Volume for the XV Anniversary of the Ibero-American Institute of The Hague for Peace, Human Rights and International (2011-2025)

 

Academic directors: Héctor Olasolo (Spain), Mario Iván Urueña-Sánchez (Colombia) & R.J. Blaise MacLean (Canada).

Editors: Valentina Ramírez Barrera (Colombia), Andrés Sánchez Sarmiento (Colombia), Francisa Gomes da Silva Seabra (Portugal), Luisa Fernanda Rojas Serrano (Colombia) & Laura Vacca Moyano (Colombia).

Foreword: IIH Board of Directors.

Presentation/Presentación: The Ibero-American Institute of The Hague for Peace, Human Rights and International Justice in its XV Anniversary (2011-2025): structure, activities, research Networks, publications and partners: Héctor Olasolo (Spain), Kees Koonings (The Netherlands), Romina Catera (Argentina) & Isabel Düsterhöft (Germany).

I. ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK AND METHODOLOGY.

Chapter 1. Understanding the analytical framework and methodology of the trilogy, by Héctor Olasolo (Spain), Mario Iván Urueña-Sánchez (Colombia), R.J. Blaise MacLean (Canada) & Andrés Sánchez Sarmiento (Colombia).

II. THE ROLE OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT FROM CRITICAL STUDIES.

Chapter 2: The perspective of the utopian horizon, by Héctor Olasolo (Spain), Gonzalo Ana Dobratinich (Argentina) & María Daniella Baquero Rojas (Colombia).

Chapter 3: The perspective of the mercy-liberation principle, by Camilo Alfonso López Saavedra (Colombia) & Carlos Andrés Pinto López (Colombia).

Chapter 4: The perspective of Marxism, by Charlotth Back (Brasil) & Luiz Felipe Osório (Brasil).

Chapter 5: The perspective of the Helsinki school, by Mario Iván Urueña-Sánchez (Colombia), Miriam Dermer-Wodnicky (Colombia) & Clara Esperanza Hernández-Cortés (Colombia).

Chapter 6: The perspective of social idealism, by Mario Iván Urueña-Sánchez (Colombia). Miriam Dermer-Wodnicky (Colombia) & Clara Esperanza Hernández-Cortés (Colombia).

III. THE ROLE OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT FROM SUBALTERN HISTORICAL-CONTEXTUAL APPROACHES.

Chapter 7: The biblical historical-contextual hermeneutical perspective, by Juan Esteban Santamaría-Rodríguez (Colombia) & José Leonar Botero Martínez (Colombia).

Chapter 8: The perspective of emancipatory legal pluralism, by Charlotth Back (Brasil), Tiago Resende Botelho (Brasil) & Luisa Villarraga Zschommler (Colombia.

Chapter 9: The perspective of post-colonialism and the global south, by Laura Catalina Cárdenas Rodríguez (Colombia), Juan Pablo Pontón-Serra (Colombia), Enrique Prieto-Ríos (Colombia) & Daniela Suárez Vargas (Colombia).

Chapter 10: The perspective of Third World theories, by Jorge Rodríguez Rodríguez (Spain) & Joana Loyo Cabezudo (Spain).

Chapter 11: The perspective of African States, by Héctor Olasolo (Spain), Federico Freydell Mesa (Colombia) & Rafael Tamayo-Álvarez (Colombia).

IV. CONCLUSIONS.

Chapter 12. Conclusions, by Héctor Olasolo (Spain), Mario Iván Urueña-Sánchez (Colombia), R.J. Blaise MacLean (Canada) & Andrés Sánchez Sarmiento (Colombia).