16 research outputs found

    La solución pacífica de controversias entre estados

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    Fil: Vinuesa, Raúl Emilio. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Cátedra Derecho Internacional Público. Buenos Aires, Argentina"...sobre la base de la conferencia pronunciada en Rio de Janeiro durante el IX Curso de Derecho Internacional organizado por la Secretaria General de la OEA y el Comité Jurídico Interamericano. Agosto de 1982."\

    La aplicación del derecho internacional humanitario por los tribunales nacionales : la extradición de criminales de guerra (a propósito del caso "Priebke, Erich / solicitud de extradición ", causa 1663/94)

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    Fil: Vinuesa, Raúl Emilio. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Cátedra Derecho Internacional Público. Buenos Aires, ArgentinaFil: Vinuesa, Raúl Emilio. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Cátedra Derechos Humanos. Buenos Aires, Argentin

    La responsabilidad del Estado frente a las desapariciones forzosas de personas según la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos

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    Fil: Vinuesa, Raúl Emilio. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Buenos Aires, Argentin

    The British Influence in the Birth of Spanish Sport

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    Sports started to gain relevance in Spain around the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century as a leisure and health option of the upper classes imported from Britain. Its early development was intertwined with the spread of other kinds of physical activities with much more tradition on the continent: gymnastics and physical education. First played by the ruling classes – aristocracy and high bourgeoisie – sports permeated towards petty bourgeoisie and middle classes in urban areas such as Madrid, Barcelona, San Sebastián and Santander. This pattern meant that the expansion of sports was unavoidably tied to the degree of industrialisation and cultural modernisation of the country. Since 1910, and mainly during the 1920s, sport grew in popularity as a spectacle and, toa much lesser degree, as a practice among the Spanish population

    El sistema de la ONU para la autorización del uso de la fuerza

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    Fil: Vinuesa, Raúl E. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Derecho. Buenos Aires, ArgentinaTema: Derecho Internacional Público / Dra. Hortensia Gutiérrez Posse, coord. -- Sección I Derecho Internacional Público.

    The MERCOSUR Settlement of Disputes System

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    La reina del mundo: reflexiones sobre la historia de la opinión pública

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    Obra colectiva sobre la evolución histórica de la opinión pública abordada desde un enfoque de carácter multidisciplinar, desde las perspectivas de análisis de la historiografía, la filosofia, la sociología y las ciencias de la información. Pretende presentar una visión global del fenómeno de la opinión pública en toda su dimensió

    Integrated Assessment of the Canary Current large marine ecosystem with a focus on Senegal-Gambia-Guinea-Bissau subregion

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    Trabajo presentado en West Africa Marine Science Symposium (WAMSS), celebrado en Accra (Ghana) entre el 18 y el 20 de agosto de 2023

    Integrated Assessment of the Canary Current large marine ecosystem with a focus on the Canary Islands and Senegal-Gambia-Guinea-Bissau subregions

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    Trabajo presentado en ICES Annual Science Conference 2023, celebrado en Bilbao (España) entre el 11 y el 14 de septiembre de 2023.The Canary Current Large Marine Ecosystem (or CCLME) is one of the most productive upwelling systems on the globe. It extends from the Straits of Gibraltar in the north to Bijagós Islands off Guinea-Bissau in the south, embracing the coasts and Exclusive Economic Zones of Morocco and Western Sahara, Mauritania, Senegal, the Gambia and Guinea-Bissau as well as the Canary (Spain) and Cabo Verde archipelagos. Due to its high productivity, the CCLME is key in providing food and resources to its bordering countries and much of West Africa. It comprises a diverse array of marine and coastal ecosystems, which includes dunes and long beaches, estuaries and saltmarshes, mangroves and seagrass beds, as well as open sea areas. An Integrated Ecosystem Assessment (IEA) was carried out for the whole CCLME, with particular focus on the Canary Islands and the Senegal-Gambia-Guinea-Bissau (SGGB) subregions as these are most different in terms of human activities and pressures, ecological characteristics and social, economic and institutional objectives. The CCLME IEA included various methodologies: (i) a structured risk assessment following the ODEMM methodology, (ii) a number of informal (interviews) and formal (workshops) scoping and validation exercises with stakeholders and (iii) the co-creation of a conceptual model with actors from very diverse backgrounds: NGOs, fishers, managers, natural and social scientists. The three top sectors impacting the CCLME as a whole were fishing, shipping and agriculture. These were the same and in the same order for the southern stretch of the CCLME. For the Canaries, tourism/recreation displaced agriculture in the third position. In terms of pressures litter, contaminants and species extraction dominated across subregions. The most impacted ecosystem components were reptiles, seabirds, marine mammals and demersal fish. A conceptual model was crafted for the SGGB subregion and captured issues not accounted for by the risk assessment, such as the current dramatic impacts of climate change with knock-on effects on livelihoods and migration patterns or the upcoming gas extraction project. While the Canaries future is perceived to revolve around blue growth and energy transition (i.e., renewables), the SGGB has great hopes on the prospects that the exploitation of fossil fuels can bring in terms of development. The scarcity of data, natural and cultural diversity, including languages, policy landscapes and development levels, posed great challenges to this IEA endeavour but gave us a number of practices and lessons learned that we believe are worth sharing across the community of IEA practitioners
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