08false100true score desc 2gaptrue5mapcontentxmltrue50object_type_i,object_type_i_lookup,coverage_period_mt,geographic_area_mt,geographic_coordinates_mt,author_role_mt,contributor_role_mt,org_id_mt,org_role_mt,supervisor_mt,supervisor_id_mi,supervisor_id_mi_lookup,fields_of_research_mi,fields_of_research_mi_lookup,display_type_i,display_type_i_lookup,seo_code_mi,seo_code_mi_lookup,copyright_i,license_i,license_i_lookup,oa_compliance_t,oa_notes_t,grant_id_t,funding_body_t,description_of_resource_t,software_required_t,project_description_t,keywords_mt,project_name_t,project_id_t,isdatasetof_mt,isdatasetof_mt_lookup,notes_t,date_dt,xsd_display_option_mi,xsd_display_option_mi_lookup,file_downloads_i,created_date_dt,updated_date_dt,research_program_mt,title_t,depositor_i,isderivationof_mt,assigned_user_id_mt,assigned_group_id_mi,assigned_group_id_mi_lookup,isdatacomponentof_mt,isannotationof_mt,author_id_mi,author_id_mi_lookup,alternative_title_mt,pid_t,publisher_t,author_mt,contributor_mt,contributor_id_mi,contributor_id_mi_lookup,refereed_i,series_t,journal_name_t,newspaper_t,conference_name_t,book_title_t,identifier_mt,edition_t,subject_mi,subject_mi_lookup,place_of_publication_t,start_page_t,end_page_t,chapter_number_t,issue_number_t,volume_number_t,conference_dates_t,conference_location_t,patent_number_t,country_of_issue_t,description_t,date_available_dt,language_mt,phonetic_title_t,language_of_title_mt,translated_title_t,phonetic_journal_name_t,translated_journal_name_t,phonetic_book_title_t,translated_book_title_t,phonetic_newspaper_t,file_attachment_name_mt,translated_newspaper_t,phonetic_conference_name_t,translated_conference_name_t,issn_mt,isbn_mt,isi_loc_t,prn_t,output_availability_t,na_explanation_t,sensitivity_explanation_t,file_attachment_content_mt,org_unit_name_t,org_name_t,report_number_t,sequence_i,genre_t,genre_type_t,formatted_title_t,formatted_abstract_t,parent_publication_t,convener_t,ismemberof_mt,ismemberof_mt_lookup,link_mt,link_description_mt,rights_t,views_i,scopus_id_t,thomson_citation_count_i,gs_citation_count_i,gs_cited_by_link_t,scopus_citation_count_i,status_i,status_i_lookup,first_author_in_document_derived_t,first_author_in_fez_derived_t,ands_collection_type_t,start_date_dt,end_date_dt,access_conditions_t,extent_t,contact_details_email_mt,contact_details_physical_mt,loc_subject_heading_mt,depositor_affiliation_i,surrounding_features_mt,condition_mt,style_mt,period_mt,category_mt,subcategory_mt,structural_systems_mt,adt_id_t,subtype_t,language_of_parent_title_t,proceedings_title_t,file_description_mt,herdc_code_i,herdc_code_i_lookup,herdc_status_i,herdc_status_i_lookup,institutional_status_i,institutional_status_i_lookup,herdc_notes_t,follow_up_flags_i,follow_up_flags_i_lookup,follow_up_flags_imu_i,follow_up_flags_imu_i_lookup,scopus_doc_type_t,scopus_doc_type_t_lookup,wok_doc_type_t,wok_doc_type_t_lookup,conference_id_i,total_chapters_t,publisher_id_i,translated_proceedings_title_t,native_script_title_t,roman_script_title_t,native_script_book_title_t,roman_script_book_title_t,native_script_journal_name_t,roman_script_journal_name_t,native_script_conference_name_t,roman_script_conference_name_t,total_pages_t,native_script_proceedings_title_t,roman_script_proceedings_title_t,language_of_book_title_mt,language_of_journal_name_mt,language_of_proceedings_title_mt,doi_t,author_count_t,collection_year_dt,location_mt,building_materials_mt,architectural_features_mt,interior_features_mt,sherpa_colour_t,ain_detail_t,rj_2010_rank_t,rj_2010_title_t,rj_2012_rank_t,rj_2012_title_t,rc_2010_rank_t,rc_2010_title_t,herdc_code_description_t,score,citation_t1true60 (spanish historical constitutionalism AND status_i:(2)) 6display_type_idisplay_type_i_lookup_exactkeywords_mftdate_year_tauthor_id_miauthor_id_mi_lookup_exactauthor_mftjournal_name_t_ftsubject_misubject_mi_lookup_exactgenre_type_t_ftismemberof_mftismemberof_mt_lookup_exactsubtype_t_ftscopus_doc_type_t_ftscopus_doc_type_t_lookup_exact(_authlister_t:(1)) AND (status_i:(2)) 34232014-01-01T00:00:00Z3692014-07-02T23:19:27ZRevisión, trascendencia constitucional y memoria histórica = Appeal by review, constitutional relevance and historical memorybibliuned:DerechoPolitico-2014-89-6025La posibilidad de revisar y, en su caso, declarar la nulidad de las sentencias del franquismo ha sido y, continua siendo, una cuestión muy controvertida política, doctrinal y también jurisprudencialmente.
Este trabajo analiza con ojos críticos el criterio mantenido recientemente por el Tribunal Supremo en esta materia al denegar la autorización para la interposición del recurso de revisión basándose en la supuesta carencia de objeto del recurso porque cuando la Ley de Memoria Histórica declara la injusticia e ilegitimidad de dichas condenas las priva de eficacia jurídica. Una respuesta que, como se explicará en las siguientes páginas, vulnera el derecho a la tutela judicial efectiva en dos de sus dimensiones concretas: el derecho de acceso al proceso y, el derecho a un resolución fundada en derecho; pero que afecta también indirectamente al derecho a la presunción de inocencia.
Una forma gráfica de presentar esta crítica es exponiéndola a través de un caso concreto; el de una víctima paradigmática del franquismo, el poeta Miguel Hernández y su familia a quienes inexplicablemente ambos tribunales les hayan cerrado las puertas.Appeal by review (revisión) against judgment, that has already gained res judicata, is an extraordinary remedy based upon reasons of Justice. When this appeal by review is used for the annulment of judgments of Franco dictatorship, this well known statement had been in the past, and has been nowadays, a very controversial issue politically, doctrinally and jurisprudentially.
This critical paper analyses the Spanish Supreme Court’s opinion uphold in this matter to deny the previous authorisation, which is requiered for filing the petition of the appeal by review. The Supreme Court based its decision on a alleged lack of purpose for this review procedure because when the Historical Memory Law declares injustice and illegitimacy of those sentences, this Law deprives them also of their legal effect. This answer, as we explained in the following pages, violates the due process (as a fundamental right of effective judicial protection) in two of its specific dimensions: the right of access to the courts and judicial procedure and the right to a decision based in law, but also indirectly affects the presumption of innocence.
In order to illustrate this review we decided to do it through a specific case, which involves a paradigmatic victim of Franco’s regime, the poet Miguel Hernández and his family to whom the Spanish Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court have closed inexplicably their doors for Justice.06842<a class="citation_author_name" title="Browse by Author Name for Oubiña Barbolla, Sabela" href="/fez/list/author/Oubiña Barbolla, Sabela/">Oubiña Barbolla, Sabela</a> . (<span class="citation_date">2014</span>) <a class="citation_title" title="Click to view : Revisión, trascendencia constitucional y memoria histórica = Appeal by review, constitutional relevance and historical memory" href="/fez/view/bibliuned:DerechoPolitico-2014-89-6025">Revisión, trascendencia constitucional y memoria histórica = Appeal by review, constitutional relevance and historical memory</a>. RecordArtículo de revistaPublishedhttp://udcdata.info/021523DerechoUniversidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (España). Facultad de Derecho. Departamento de Derecho PolíticoOubiña Barbolla, Sabelabibliuned:DerechoPolitico-2014-89-6025bibliuned:DerechoPolitico-2014-89-6025esDocumento.pdfbibliuned:DerechoPolitico-2014-89bibliuned:Setopenairebibliuned:SetarticuloRevista de derecho político. Año 2014, n. 89Set de openaireSet de artículohttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0Licencia Creative CommonsOubiña BarbollaAcceso abierto0.809948334231996-01-01T00:00:00Z16062009-01-19T15:35:26Z2021-10-18T20:13:01ZIs the South so different? Italian and Spanish families in a comparative perspectivebibliuned:23034This article analyses family changes in Italy and Spain from 1960 to 1990 and contrasts them with four Central/Northern European countries. Italy and Spain show extremely rapid family changes, which nevertheless do not lead to a convergence between southern and central/northern families. The particularities of the southern family model are a high degree of cross-generational cohabitation, a high frequency of social contacts and help within kinship, a strong institutionalization of marriage, a low female employment rate in the formal labour market, a low fertility rate, and widespread family and child-oriented attitudes. In addition, relations between generations are seen more in terms of obligations than in terms of individual choice. We conclude that the specific economic situation, the particularities of social policies and the family culture in Italy and Spain are important barriers for a further individualization of family relations in these societies. The aim of this paper is to analyse Italy and Spain as representatives of a Mediterranean type of society. The question whether such a type exists with respect to family changes will be explored here. For this purpose we use a comparative perspective. Our assumption is that the division of labour between state, family, labour market and church in Mediterranean countries is a specific one. The societal configuration in the South will be analysed from the perspective of the family. First, we will describe differences in demography and family among countries as well as cultural differences observed by opinion surveys. Second, we will develop some hypotheses in order to explain the southern family characteristics, their interrelations and their relation to other institutions. To this end, we will concentrate on the possible effects that southern modernization processes, employment and unemployment trends, family laws, social policies and some historical and cultural peculiarities in Italy and Spain have on family patterns. In this paper the hypotheses will be put forward only in a preliminary way, without testing them. The socio-economic crisis that has affected all European countries since the mid-seventies has gradually produced a collective loss of faith in the possibility of uninterrupted economic growth and disillusion concerning the programmes and promises of the welfare society. As a result of the crisis, the institutional framework began to change and the social division of responsibilities among the various institutional spheres, state, market and family, had to (and still has to) be re-negotiated (Flora 1985). In the new social and economic context, the interest in the family in the analysis of western-welfare society has become wider. From a cross-national perspective it is often assumed that southern welfare states have a different division of labour between state, market and family than other Northern/Central European societies (Ferrera 1994). Studies on this field show that, despite the development of the welfare state, the family and the ‘serving work’ (Balbo 1983) carried out by women in southern welfare societies have continued to constitute an indispensable resource for the satisfaction of many basic needs. The changing age structure of the population, the decreasing fertility rate and the emerging female employment patterns in Italy and Spain may affect the southern division of labour in an important way. While analysts are emphasizing the importance of the family for the satisfaction of many basic needs in this welfare state crisis period, the most “family-oriented” countries are moving towards a more individualistic society? Is this a contradiction? First of all, it needs to be determined to what extent the family is changing in the South and therefore we will give a general overview on these changes in the European context. Since 1965, in most European countries - with varying intensity and timing - a reduction in the fertility rate and an increase in the divorce rate has taken place. These new family behaviours have been related to the gradual diffusion of cohabitation and to the increase in births out of wedlock. During the 1970s these family changes became more radical in Scandinavia and more widespread in Central Europe, but they remained weak in Southern Europe. What was really new were the relations between sexes and generations. Equal opportunities became an important issue in public life (Roussel 1992), and changes in family roles also occurred. More women have entered the labour market, in a wider range of occupations and for a longer period than at any other time since the Industrial Revolution (Rapoport 1989).010582<a class="citation_author_name" title="Navegar por nombre de Autor de Jurado Guerrero, Teresa" href="/fez/list/author/Jurado Guerrero, Teresa/">Jurado Guerrero, Teresa</a> y <a class="citation_author_name" title="Navegar por nombre de Autor de Naldini, Manuela" href="/fez/list/author/Naldini, Manuela/">Naldini, Manuela</a> . (<span class="citation_date">1996</span>) <a class="citation_title" title="Click para ver : Is the South so different? Italian and Spanish families in a comparative perspective" href="/fez/view/bibliuned:23034">Is the South so different? Italian and Spanish families in a comparative perspective</a>. RecordArtículo de revistaPublishedSociologíaJurado Guerrero, TeresaNaldini, Manuelahttp://e-spacio.uned.es/fez/view/bibliuned:23034bibliuned:23034engDocumento.pdfbibliuned:Setopenairebibliuned:Setarticulobibliuned:Dpto.SociologiaII.ArticulosSet de openaireSet de artículoDepartamento de Sociología II (UNED). Artículoshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0Licencia Creative CommonsJurado GuerreroAcceso abierto0.4642309234172017-06-26T00:00:00Z24112017-08-31T03:08:16Z2019-03-27T21:49:16ZLos fenómenos preternaturales y sus diferentes dimensiones en el pensamiento de Swedenborg, Kant y William Jamestesisuned:Filosofia-AlopezvaleThe academic tradition has provided us with several ways to approach history and construct!he narrations that shape it. This PhD offers a historical overview of preternatural phenomena, that is, of those experiences, sensations and feelings that are thus far inexplicable from existing academic perspectives. Ghost sightings, encounters with ghosts and spirits, telepathy, thought transference, and near-death experiences are examples of preternatural phenomena. Although they have been approached from different perspectives, strange phenomena have been scarcely studied. This has resulted in one of!he majar problems in approaching preternatural phenomena -a prejudiced rejection announced by Kant and denounced by James. Scientists and philosophers -even the rnost open-minded- have not made any real efforts to approach a number of events that contributed to shape the society they lived in. Likewise, researchers devoted to the study of preternatural phenomena have no! tried to understand or refute!he criticism on their work. The present PhD intends to offer a combined perspective on!he subject -an analysis that aspires to be both critical and as free as prejudice as possible. This relates to the dichotomy between scholar science and "marginal science", which has traditionally been neglected or treated as pseudoscience. This dissertation focuses on a specific historical period: the second half of the 18'" century and!he 19'" century -a time when mediums, psychics, and seers thrived, and ghostly encounters took place in unprecedented numbers. Preternatural phenomena were, indeed, in fashion -also in Academy: Swedenborg, Kant, and James are bu! three of the many philosophers, scientists, and religious scholars who devoted part of their work to this complex subject. The third section of this PhD offers a brief overview of the determining historie events that took place during the transition from the Modern to!he Contemporary age, and lays out the majar theories that contributed to shape subsequent scholarly approaches to preternatural phenomena. The different discussed elements are thematically brought together and put into relation far their analysis in!he ensuing chapters. Each of the authors is here discussed as a representative of a speciftc approach and they are presented in chronological arder: Swedenborg (as a representative of the spiritual approach), Kant (as a representative of!he philosophical approach), and William James (as a representative of the scientiftc approach). This PhD is structured as follows: the introduction, which is devoted to justify the pertinence of this research and offer an outline of!he state of!he art, is followed by a section dedicated to Swedenborg. This first section delves into!he main events of the author's lile and career and lays out!he question of his classification as an author -should he be called a scientist, a seer, a mystic? lt also constitutes an introduction of Swedenborg's visionary activity in the Spanish field.0Doctoral Thesis7142<a class="citation_author_name" title="Navegar por nombre de Autor de López Vale, Alma" href="/fez/list/author/López Vale, Alma/">López Vale, Alma</a>. <b><i><a class="citation_title" title="Click para ver : Los fenómenos preternaturales y sus diferentes dimensiones en el pensamiento de Swedenborg, Kant y William James" href="/fez/view/tesisuned:Filosofia-Alopezvale">Los fenómenos preternaturales y sus diferentes dimensiones en el pensamiento de Swedenborg, Kant y William James</a></i></b> . <span class="citation_date">2017</span>. <span class="citation_publisher">Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (España). Facultad de Filosofía. Departamento de Filosofía</span>RecordDoctoral ThesisPublishedFilosofíaUniversidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (España). Facultad de Filosofía. Departamento de FilosofíaLópez Vale, AlmaCastillo, Ramón deltesisuned:Filosofia-Alopezvalehttp://e-spacio.uned.es/fez/view/tesisuned:Filosofia-AlopezvaleLOPEZ_VALE_Alma_Tesis.pdfpresmd_LOPEZ_VALE_Alma_Tesis.xmltesisuned:Filosofiabibliuned:Setthesisbibliuned:Setopenairebibliuned:DptoFilosofia-FFilosofia-TesisTesis Facultad de Filosofía (UNED)Set de Tesis Doctorales de la UNEDSet de openaireDepartamento de Filosofía (UNED). Tesishttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Licencia de acceso Creative CommonsLópez ValeAcceso abierto0.45853642223232