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Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
Justice in Mexico Project: Resource Side Menu
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Red de Justicia

The Justice in Mexico Project at the Trans-Border Institute of the University of San Diego is pleased to host the Red de Justicia / Justice Network, a collaborative research project with Mexico City think tank CIDAC (Centro de Investigación para el Desarrollo). Funded by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Red de Justicia comprises academics and experts from nine Mexican states who gather to analyze state-level criminal justice developments and work to identify best practices in justice reform. By emphasizing sub-national change, the Red creates an important network for scholars and experts who advocate for justice sector reform at the state and local level in Mexico. The Red de Justicia helps to decentralize national-level policy analysis and debates on key criminal justice issues, such as the evolution of an adversarial system, the revamping of state criminal codes, and the incorporation of new sentencing mechanisms and trial procedures. The Red de Justicia hosts regular working group meetings and public forums dealing with state-level criminal justice reform in Mexico, and its members regularly contribute papers and reports on state-level criminal justice developments on this website.

  • Academics and Experts
  • Working Group Meetings
  • Technical Analyses, Papers, and Reports
  • Network of Scholars

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Academics and Experts: The Red / Network comprises professors of law, social scientists, state court judges, and non-governmental advocates from nine Mexican states: Aguascalientes, Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, Oaxaca, Querétaro, Jalisco, and Zacatecas. In many cases, the Red’s 15 current members hold concurrent positions in academia, the judiciary, or government, while all are closely involved in studying and shaping their state’s criminal justice systems.

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    Working Group Meetings: Over the course of 2007 and 2008, the Justice Network will host eight working group meetings – to be accompanied by public forums – that will enable members to discuss reforms taking place in their particular states. Beginning with the first meeting in Coahuila scheduled for March 2007, the meetings will bring together not only Red de Justicia members but also outside speakers and panelists to discuss some of the most salient issues influencing the debate today, such as the introduction of oral argument in criminal proceedings.

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    Technical Analyses, Papers, and Reports: Among other tangible outputs, Red de Justicia members also produce technical analyses and reports on state-level criminal justice developments. These bilingual reports, jointly published by CIDAC and the Justice in Mexico Project, trace the legal history of the reform debate in the individual states, paying particularly close attention to political and social conditions; enumerate the many proposed and approved amendments to state criminal codes; and offer detailed diagnoses of the problems afflicting the Mexican criminal justice system. The two most recent reports, on crime rates and the overhaul of the state criminal code in Baja California, and the evolution of alternative sentencing in Coahuila, will soon be available on the “Resources” page of the Justice in Mexico Project website by clicking on the “Documents from our partners” tab.

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    Network of Scholars: The directory below lists the names, institutional affiliations, and most recent contact information of the current members of the Red de Justicia. Note: Phone numbers are if dialed from United States.

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    Aguascalientes
    Aarón A.Castillo
    Director, School of Law
    Universidad Bonaterra de Aguascalientes
    Aguascalientes, Ags.
    011-52 (449) 910-6214/15
    acastil3@nd.edu and aacf@bonaterra.edu.mx

    Maria Candelaria Pelayo TorresBaja California
    Maria Candelaria Pelayo Torres
    Professor, School of Law
    Universidad Autónoma de Baja California
    Mexicali, B.C.
    011-52 (686) 566-4225/2010/9346 ext. 131
    candeuabc@hotmail.com

    Daniel Solorio RamírezDaniel Solorio Ramírez.
    Professor, School of Law
    Universidad Autónoma de Baja California
    Mexicali, B.C.
    011-52 (686) 557-2458 and (686) 566-4225 ext. 129
    danielsr21@hotmail.com

    Coahuila
    Antonio Berchelmann ArizpeAntonio Berchelmann Arizpe
    Professor, College of Jurisprudence
    Universidad Autónoma de Coahuila (UADEC)
    Saltillo, Coahuila
    011-52 (844) 410-6054 and 410-6063
    aberchelmanna@prodigy.net.mx
    aberchelmann@hotmail.com

    Luis Efrén Ríos Vega
    Professor, College of Jurisprudence
    Universidad Autónoma de Coahuila (UADEC)
    Saltillo, Coahuila
    011-52 (871) 716-4250
    luisriosvega@telefonica.net
    luisriosvega@hotmail.com

    Chihuahua:
    Heliodoro Araiza ReyesHeliodoro Araiza Reyes
    Professor, College of Law
    Universidad Autónoma de Chihuahua
    Chihuahua, Chih.
    011-52 (614) 414-2755
    heliodoro222@hotmail.com

     

     

    Jorge Gabriel Lugo ReyesJorge Gabriel Lugo Reyes
    Professor, College of Law
    Universidad Autónoma de Chihuahua
    Chihuahua, Chih.
    011-52 (614) 413-3140
    jorgelugor@mexico.com

    Jalisco
    Guillermo ZepedaGuillermo Zepeda
    Partner, Centro de Investigación para el Desarrollo (CIDAC)
    Zapopan, Jalisco
    011-52 (33) 5000-4029
    gzepeda@cidacgdl.com.mx
    http://www.cidac.org.mx

    Marcos Pablo Moloeznik
    Research Professor, Universidad de Guadalajara
    011-52 (33) 3819-3306/05 ext. 3306
    mmoloeznik@yahoo.com.es

    Nuevo León
    Alejandro Ponce de León G.
    Regional Director, Proderecho
    011-52 (81) 1366-8969

    Iker Ibarreche Pereda
    Proderecho
    iibarreche@proderecho.com.mx
    011-52 (81) 1366-8969

    Nina Ruiz
    Legislative Studies Director, State Attorney General’s Office, State of Nuevo León
    Monterrey, N.L.
    011-52 (81) 2020-4020/4021
    nruiz@nl.gob.mx

    Luis David Ortiz Salinas
    Assistant Attorney General / Subprocurador Jurídico
    State Attorney General’s Office, State of Nuevo León
    Monterrey, N.L.
    011-52 (81) 2020-4023
    luis.ortiz@nl.gob.mx

    Oaxaca
    Rubén Vasconcelos Méndez
    Director, Juvenile Court (Consejo de Menores), State of Oaxaca
    Instituto de Especialización Judicial
    Universidad Autónoma “Benito Juárez” de Oaxaca
    Oaxaca City, Oaxaca
    011-52 (951) 516-3870
    rubenvasconcelos@yahoo.com

    Querétaro
    Enrique Ramírez Martínez
    Professor of Criminal Law
    Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro
    Querétaro, Querétaro
    011-52 (442) 192-1268
    http://www.uaq.mx

    Zacatecas
    Omar Williams López Ovalle
    President, State Human Rights Comission, Aguascalientes
    011-52 (449) 915-3045

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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