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Además de presentar una revisión histórica del Estado como instrumento punitivo, así como de los modelos de enjuiciamiento hasta llegar a lo establecido en los códigos actuales, este libro analiza algunos aspectos relacionados con las teorías del proceso, el delito y la prueba. El objetivo es explicar el actual modelo acusatorio adversarial mexicano, a partir de la evolución del derecho penal. El autor desarrolla tres ejes: el proceso dentro del sistema de enjuiciamiento acusatorio, el funcionalismo normativo como teoría de imputación de responsabilidad penal y el régimen probatorio en el modelo adversarial nacional. También hace una descripción de las ideas penales y sus cambios a lo largo de diferentes corrientes de pensamiento, y culmina con una evaluación crítica de la implementación del modelo acusatorio adversarial en nuestro país.
A través de 88 películas —Ladrones de bicicletas, Rashomon, Los olvidados, 12 hombres en pugna, Psicosis, El juicio de Núremberg, Matar un ruiseñor, La naranja mecánica, El padrino, Asesinato en el Expreso de Oriente, La lista de Schindler, La raíz del miedo, Presunto culpable, Snowden…— las autoras y autores de este libro toman como referencia algunas historias llevadas a la pantalla durante los últimos cien años para reflexionar sobre la política criminal, la seguridad pública, la procuración y administración de justicia. El objetivo es ofrecer una visión más amplia y provocativa de la que ofrece la teoría sobre delitos, castigos, leyes, policías, fiscales, jueces, ju...
Esta serie de cuatro volúmenes analiza las Reformas Estructurales desde varios puntos de vista: la del protagonista que desde el propio órgano estatal preparó y puso en práctica la reforma, y la de dos académicos que desde las perspectivas nacional e internacional desmenuzan el contexto, la puesta en marcha y los retos que conlleva cada una de estas Reformas. El presente volumen aborda las reformas político-electoral, al juicio de amparo, al Código Nacional de Procedimientos Penales, y en materia de justicia cotidiana.
This book is a collective work published as part of a larger project titled "Mexico-Guatemala cross-border region; regional dimensions and bases for integrated development," the purpose of which is to introduce a series of issues relative to the geopolitical dimension of Mexico’s actions in Central America and its stance on conflicts in the region between 1959 and 2019. The most widely published texts up until now have been written by Mexican authors, and we have less insight into how these processes have been viewed from Central America. With that in mind, we brought together a group of specialists, each highly renowned in their own country, some of them academics and others whose account...
"This book presents three essays on Cuba by Nobel prize winning author Gabriel Garcia Márquez. Here he describes the early days of the Cuban revolution and the impact of the US blockade of the island, first declared in February 1962, that remains in place with devastating effect to this day. The second essay relates the extraordinary and largely unknown episode of Cuba's role in Africa, when in 1975 the Cuban government sent troops to aid newly independent Angola resist an invasion by South Africa, an outstanding example of international solidarity that not only assisted Namibia gain its independence but ultimately helped to bring down the apartheid government in Pretoria. In the third essay, Garcia Marquez offers an intimate reflection on his longtime friend, Fidel Castro, describing him as "a man of austere ways and insatiable illusions, with an old-fashioned formal education, of cautious words and simple manners and incapable of conceiving any idea that is not out of the ordinary."--Page 4 of cover.
The first comprehensive biography of the author of One Hundred Years Solitude and Love in a Time of Cholera - the most popular international novelist of the last fifty years. 'Gabriel García Márquez once remarked that "every self-respecting writer should have an English biographer". He could have asked for none more accomplished than Gerald Martin' Financial Times Gabriel García Márquez, author of the modern classic One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera, is one of the greatest and most popular writers of the late-twentieth century. As Gerald Martin tells the story of the author's fascinating rise to wealth and international fame, he reveals the tensions in García...
In 1973, the film director Miguel Littín fled Chile after a U.S.-supported military coup toppled the democratically elected socialist government of Salvador Allende. The new dictator, General Augusto Pinochet, instituted a reign of terror and turned Chile into a laboratory to test the poisonous prescriptions of the American economist Milton Friedman. In 1985, Littín returned to Chile disguised as a Uruguayan businessman. He was desperate to see the homeland he’d been exiled from for so many years; he also meant to pull off a very tricky stunt: with the help of three film crews from three different countries, each supposedly busy making a movie to promote tourism, he would secretly put to...
In this fictionalized memoir of Laredo, Texas, canícula represents a time between childhood and a yet unknown adulthood.
Includes another issue of 1936 ed. without ill.