Anuario Estadístico De La Rama Judicial 2011-2012

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Anuario Estadístico De La Rama Judicial 2011-2012 OFICINA DE ADMINISTRACIÓN DE LOS TRIBUNALES TRIBUNAL GENERAL DE JUSTICIA ESTADO LIBRE ASOCIADO DE PUERTO RICO INFORME ANUAL DE LA RAMA JUDICIAL Tribunal General de Justicia Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico ANUARIO ESTADÍSTICO 2011-2012 Oficina de Administración de los Tribunales San Juan, 2013 2013 Oficina de Administración de los Tribunales (OAT) www.ramajudicial.pr PO Box 190917 San Juan, PR 00919-0917 Tel. (787) 641-6600 Hon. Federico Hernández Denton Juez Presidente Tribunal Supremo de Puerto Rico Hon. Sonia I. Vélez Colón Directora Administrativa Oficina de Administración de los Tribunales (OAT) Fecha de publicación: Junio 2013 Nota técnica: Los datos del Tribunal de Primera Instancia (TPI) contenidos en este Anuario Estadístico fueron extraídos de la base de datos el 23 de enero de 2013. Agradecemos la colaboración del personal estadístico del Tribunal Supremo y del Tribunal de Apelaciones y a la Oficina de Servicios Sociales, de la Directoría de Programas Judiciales de la OAT, por brindar sus datos. Citación sugerida: Oficina de Administración de los Tribunales (2013). Anuario Estadístico 2011-2012: Informe Anual de la Rama Judicial. San Juan, Puerto Rico. Este informe fue realizado por personal de la Oficina de Estadísticas de la Directoría de Operaciones de la OAT. Puede contactar a la Oficina de Estadísticas en el (787) 641-6998 o por fax al (787) 641-6991. Impreso en la Sección de Imprenta de la Oficina de Administración de los Tribunales. v. jgm 17/06/2013 Tabla de contenido iii CONTENIDO Ordenamiento jurídico .................................................................................................................................... 9 Datos generales ................................................................................................................................................ 10 PoBlación por región ................................................................................................................................................... 10 Jueces y Juezas ................................................................................................................................................................ 10 Tribunal Supremo ........................................................................................................................................... 12 Tribunal de Apelaciones ............................................................................................................................... 14 Tribunal de Primera Instancia .................................................................................................................... 16 Casos civiles .................................................................................................................................................................................. 21 Casos civiles en Sala Superior ........................................................................................................................................ 22 Casos civiles en Sala Municipal ..................................................................................................................................... 25 Casos criminales ......................................................................................................................................................................... 29 Casos de Ley de Tránsito ........................................................................................................................................................ 33 Casos de relaciones de familia ............................................................................................................................................. 37 Querellas contra menores ...................................................................................................................................................... 41 Anejo Estadístico .............................................................................................................................................. 45 Glosario ............................................................................................................................................................ 187 ÍNDICE DE TABLAS Tabla 1: Jueces/zas del Tribunal General de Justicia, 2011-2012 .................................................................. 11 Tabla 2: Jueces/zas por región, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 ............................................... 11 Tabla 3: Casos presentados por región judicial, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 .............. 18 Tabla 4: Casos resueltos por región judicial, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 ..................... 19 Tabla 5: Causas de acción civiles presentadas con mayor frecuencia, Tribunal de Primera Instancia: 2011-2012 ....................................................................................................................................................................... 21 Tabla 6: Causas de acción civiles presentadas con mayor frecuencia, Tribunal de Primera Instancia: Sala Superior 2011-2012 ..................................................................................................................... 22 Tabla 7: Causas de acción presentadas con mayor frecuencia Tribunal de Primera Instancia: Sala Municipal, 2011-2012 ................................................................................................................................................ 26 Tabla 8: Otra labor realizada en la Sala Municipal, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 ......... 28 Tabla 9: Órdenes expedidas en la Sala Municipal, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 .......... 28 Tabla 10: Delitos presentados con mayor frecuencia, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 .. 29 Tabla 11: Infracciones a la Ley de Tránsito presentadas con mayor frecuencia, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 ................................................................................................................................................... 33 Tabla 12: Composición de los casos de relaciones de familia presentados, por categoría de acción, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 ........................................................................................................ 37 Tabla 13: Querellas presentadas por los cinco tipos de faltas más frecuentes, Tribunal de Primera Instancia 2011-2012 ................................................................................................................................................... 41 iv Anuario Estadístico de la Rama Judicial 2011-2012 ÍNDICE DE GRÁFICAS Gráfica 1: Evolución de los recursos presentados, Tribunal Supremo, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ........................ 12 Gráfica 2: Evolución de los recursos resueltos, Tribunal Supremo, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 .............................. 13 Gráfica 3: Índice de resolución, Tribunal Supremo, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ............................................................. 13 Gráfica 4: Evolución de los recursos pendientes al final del año, Tribunal Supremo, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 13 Gráfica 5: Evolución de los recursos presentados, Tribunal de Apelaciones, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 .......... 15 Gráfica 6: Evolución de los recursos resueltos, Tribunal de Apelaciones, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 .................. 15 Gráfica 7: Índice de resolución, Tribunal de Apelaciones, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ................................................. 15 Gráfica 8: Distribución de los casos presentados, por asunto, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2011-2012 .... 16 Gráfica 9: Evolución de los casos presentados, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ..... 16 Gráfica 10: Evolución de los casos presentados, por asunto, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ................................................................................................................................................................................. 17 Gráfica 11: Casos presentados y resueltos, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 .............. 18 Gráfica 12: Evolución de los casos resueltos, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 .......... 18 Gráfica 13: Evolución del índice de resolución, por asunto, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ................................................................................................................................................................................. 19 Gráfica 14: Índice de resolución por región, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2011-2012 ........................................ 19 Gráfica 15: Evolución de los casos pendientes al final del año, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ................................................................................................................................................................................. 20 Gráfica 16: Evolución de los casos civiles presentados en el Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008 a 2011-2012 ................................................................................................................................................................................. 21 Gráfica 17: Casos civiles resueltos, por disposición, Tribunal de Primera Instancia, 2007-2008
Recommended publications
  • COURT INNOVATION Volume 1 Number 1 Winter 2008 JOURNAL OF
    pci1-1_cv:pci1-1_cv 2/20/2008 9:40 AM Page 2 COLOR IS FOR APPROXIMATION ONLY – DO NOT USE FOR COLOR APPROVAL Volume 1 Volume JOURNAL OF Number 1 COURT INNOVATION Volume 1 Number 1 Winter 2008 JOURNAL OF Welcome to the Journal of Court Innovation Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye . 1 A Word From the Executive Editors Greg Berman, Robert G.M. Keating, Michelle S. Simon . 3 COURT COURT ARTICLES Crossing the ‘Digital Divide’: Using the Internet to Impanel Jurors in Travis County, Texas Mary R. Rose and Michelle Brinkman . 5 INNOVATION Risky Business: New Hampshire’s Experience Inviting Citizens to Examine the State Courts Laura Kiernan. 33 A SLAPP in the Face: Why Principles of Federalism Suggest that Federal District Courts Should Stop Turning the Other Cheek Lisa Litwiller. 67 Learning From Failure: A Roundtable on Criminal Justice Innovation Winter 2008 Winter Greg Berman . 97 PRACTICE PIECES ComALERT: A Prosecutor’s Collaborative Model for Ensuring a Successful Transition from Prison to the Community Charles J. Hynes . 123 pp. 1-182 Two Places at Once: How the Virginia Supreme Court Uses Technology To Improve Efficiency and Safety Bob Kelley and Jim Scorzelli . 151 Law as Therapy: What Impact Do Drug Courts Have on Judges? An Interview with Judge Peggy Fulton Hora Robert V. Wolf . 159 BOOK REVIEWS The Great American Crime Decline by Franklin E. Zimring Henry M. Mascia . 169 The Electronic Evidence and Discovery Handbook by Sharon D. Nelson, Bruce A. Olson and John W. Simek William V. Rapp . 177 pci1-1_cv:pci1-1_cv 2/29/2008 12:21 PM Page 3 (Black plate) JOURNAL OF COURT INNOVATION Volume 1 Number 1 Winter 2008 CENTER FOR NEW YORK STATE PACE COURT INNOVATION JUDICIAL INSTITUTE LAW SCHOOL EXECUTIVE EDITORS GREG BERMAN, Director, Center for Court Innovation ROBERT KEATING, Dean, New York State Judicial Institute MICHELLE S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Status of Puerto Rico Revisited: Does the Current U.S.-Puerto Rico Relationship Uphold International Law?
    Fordham International Law Journal Volume 17, Issue 4 1993 Article 5 The Status of Puerto Rico Revisited: Does the Current U.S.-Puerto Rico Relationship Uphold International Law? Dorian A. Shaw∗ ∗ Copyright c 1993 by the authors. Fordham International Law Journal is produced by The Berke- ley Electronic Press (bepress). http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/ilj The Status of Puerto Rico Revisited: Does the Current U.S.-Puerto Rico Relationship Uphold International Law? Dorian A. Shaw Abstract This Note argues that the establishment of the Commonwealth government fails to fulfill the requirements of a free associated territory as detailed in United Nations General Assembly Resolu- tions 742 (“Resolution 742”) and 1541 (“Resolution 1541”) because the Puerto Rico Constitution remains subject to the Territorial Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The Territorial Clause gives the U.S. Congress plenary authority to govern territories of the United States. Part I of this Note introduces the factual and legal background of Puerto Rico’s hybrid legal status. Part II describes the different interpretations regarding the validity of Puerto Rico’s status in international law. Part III argues that the present status of Puerto Rico requires that the U.S. Congress enact legislation that allows a binding plebiscite to define the status of Puerto Rico in a manner consistent with U.N. General Assembly Resolutions 742 and 1541. Finally, this Note concludes that the U.S. Congress should act to prevent the continuation of a system of government where unequal treatment of U.S. citizens in Puerto Rico is allowed under the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Congressional Record United States Th of America PROCEEDINGS and DEBATES of the 115 CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION
    E PL UR UM IB N U U S Congressional Record United States th of America PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 115 CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION Vol. 163 WASHINGTON, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 2017 No. 46 House of Representatives The House met at 10 a.m. and was ture and demographics are our destiny. view with an Iowa talk radio show called to order by the Speaker. We cannot restore our civilization with where he discussed ‘‘the plan’’ of tele- f somebody else’s babies.’’ vision anchorman Jorge Ramos to Let that sink in for a moment. make White people the minority in MORNING-HOUR DEBATE In context, what it means is: A, America, causing KING to respond that: The SPEAKER. Pursuant to the STEVE KING believes Western civiliza- ‘‘I will predict that Hispanics and the order of the House of January 3, 2017, tion is under attack by outsiders; and, Blacks will be fighting each other be- the Chair will now recognize Members B, those outsiders can never be assimi- fore that happens.’’ from lists submitted by the majority lated or be considered part of our civ- So what happens when a Member of and minority leaders for morning-hour ilization. Congress makes racist remarks? Is he debate. God knows what Representative KING censured? Are his words taken down? Is The Chair will alternate recognition would think of my grandson who likes he rebuked by the leaders of his party? between the parties, with each party to tell me that in this arm he is Puerto If he traveled somewhere without limited to 1 hour and each Member Rican and in this one he is Mexican.
    [Show full text]
  • Pub Type Edrs Price Descriptors
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 263 272 UD 024 548 TITLE Hispanic Heritage: References, Resources and Realities. INSTITUTION New York State Education Dept., Albany. Bureau of Bilingual Education. PUB DATE 85 NOTE 51p. AVAILABLE FROMThe University of the State of New York, State Education Department, Bureau of Bilingual Education, Albany, New York, NY 12234. PUB TYPE Guides - Classroom Use - Guides (For Teachers) (052) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC03 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Area Studies; *Cultural Background; *Cultural Education; Elementary Secondary Education; *Hispanic American Culture; *Hispanic Americans ABSTRACT This booklet is a resource guide for use during Hispanic Heritage week and throughout the year to encourage learning about the many contributions Hispanics have made to our country. Part I describes Hispanic countries, giving brief facts about population, languages, racial and ethnic groups, capital city, religions, government, historical notes, geography, and economy. The countries are listed alphabetically except for Spain which comes first. Part II considers Hispanics in the United States and highlights four major groups. This section includes a brief demographic overview, followed by specific discussion of Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, and Dominicans, with demographic data for each group. Part III gives global contributions and achievements of Hispanics, first from an historical perspective, focusing primarily on individuals. These achievements are listed in chronological order from 1900-1984. Next are achievements in politics, including data on number of elected officials of Hispanic origin in cities and states, with related demographic data on proportion of Hispanics in the local or state population. This is followed by information on Hispanics' achievements in sports and by miscellaneous facts of interest about Hispanics.
    [Show full text]
  • CONGRESSIONAL RECORD— Extensions Of
    September 17, 2014 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — Extensions of Remarks E1439 the First Circuit in Boston, Massachusetts. tracting thousands of visitors to wineries, all of our courageous veterans receive ade- From 1991 to 1992, he was the Chief of Staff greenhouses, and seasonal pumpkin picking. quate disability compensation. for the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico, Consisting of over 600 farms spanning f Jaime Fuster, in Washington, D.C. Bhatia is 35,000 acres, Suffolk County farms form the also the former Executive Director of the Puer- pillar of the East End economy and contribute TRIBUTE TO MR. BRENDAN to Rico Federal Affairs Administration in millions of dollars to the Long Island and New BERNARD FRANCIS MCKAY Washington D.C. As the Executive Director, York state economies, supporting local jobs he officially represented the Governor of Puer- and igniting economic growth across the re- HON. ZOE LOFGREN to Rico on important issues affecting the Com- gion. This success is sustainable with the help OF CALIFORNIA monwealth. of the Suffolk County Soil and Water Con- IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Bhatia was elected as an official Senate servation District and can help further propel Wednesday, September 17, 2014 candidate in the Popular Democratic Party Long Island’s continuing economic recovery. (Partido Popular Democra´tico or PPD) primary Mr. Speaker, helping local farmers secure Ms. LOFGREN. Mr. Speaker, it is with a on March 9, 2008. At the 2008 general elec- federal aid and educating them about building very heavy heart that I share this obituary of tions, Bhatia won one of only five Senate green infrastructure are just some of the many an outstanding young American, Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Strength in Numbers, Challenges in Diversity Legislative Trends and Power Sharing Among Hispanic Americans in Congress, 1977–2012
    Strength in Numbers, Challenges in Diversity legislative trends and power sharing among hispanic americans in congress, 1977–2012 When Congress debated new immigration legislation in 2006, Senator Mel Martinez of Florida was much in demand. If he was not speaking before an audience, Martinez was cornering his colleagues in the Capitol or talking to congressional staffers who were concerned about how the bill would affect them. “Hearing it from the guy behind the counter, they know the names of the bills, it’s what everyone is talking about in the Hispanic community,” he told a Miami reporter.1 The first Cuban American to serve in the U.S. Senate, Martinez immigrated to the United States in the 1960s. Part of a generation of Hispanic Americans that changed U.S. society and Congress’s legislative focus, Martinez and many of his Hispanic colleagues during this period were immigrants or the children of immigrants, and their congressional ambitions were shaped by their stories and their families’ stories. Martinez’s policy preferences were informed by his childhood and by the experiences and observations of other Hispanic Members.2 Since their constituents frequently struggled with English and with discrimination, these issues became central to Hispanic Members’ agendas. Other issues included the United States’ relationship with Cuba and the federal government’s relationship with its territories. But perhaps the most important topic of debate during the latter part of the 20th century was immigration. “There are those in the country who feel the country is ‘full,’” Martinez observed in 2006. “Had that been the prevailing view in the 1960s, I would not be here.”3 The Hispanic Americans who entered Congress between 1977 and 2012 represent the greatest increase in their ethnic group in congressional history.
    [Show full text]
  • PR UPR-RP Colección Puertorriqueña
    Universidad de Puerto Rico Recinto de Río Piedras Sistema de Bibliotecas Colección Puertorriqueña Código de Referencia: PR UPR-RP Colección Puertorriqueña Título: Colección de Fotografías Misceláneas, Vol. 1 Fechas: 1898-1993 Nivel de descripción: Colección Volumen y soporte: 1, 314 fotografías aproximadamente Nombre del Productor: Varios Forma de ingreso: Donaciones Valor y selección: Dado el valor histórico de las fotografías no se llevó a cabo ninguna eliminación. Nuevos ingresos: Se vislumbran nuevos ingresos Organización: Las fotografías se describieron, se enumeraron y se colocaron en material libre de ácido. Selección y eliminación: La colección no sufrió expurgo Condición de acceso y Reproducción: La consulta de los documentos va dirigida al estudiante universitario y al investigador. La reproducción de la documentación está sujeta a lo establecido en las correspondientes normas de la Colección Puertorriqueña. La consulta de la documentación se hará en Mesa Controlada, el usuario-investigador no fotocopiará ni usará pluma fuente o bolígrafo al consultar los documentos. Características físicas y Requisitos técnicos: El estado de conservación de la colección en general es buena. Instrumento de descripción: Catálogo de Fotografías Misceláneas, Vol. I Nota del Bibliotecario: Descripción y entrada de los registros realizados por María E. Ordóñez Mercado Fecha: 2011 ABOGADAS--PUERTO RICO Señora de Eusebio López de Acosta. [S.l.: s.n., 19--]. 1 foto.: sepia, 10.5 x 9 cm. La señora de Eusebio López de Acosta es natural de tivoli on the Hudson, hija de un médico y de una abogada. Estudió leyes y se graduó en 1912, pasó la revalida en Nueva York en 1913, en 1915 trabajó en el Tribunal Federal de Puerto Rico.
    [Show full text]
  • ÍNDICE DE PUBLICACIÓN 1932 - Presente
    ÍNDICE DE PUBLICACIÓN 1932 - Presente www.revistajuridicaupr.org 1 Tabla de Contenido VOLUMEN 85 (2016) ................................................................................................................................. 5 VOLUMEN 84 (2015) ................................................................................................................................. 8 VOLUMEN 83 (2014) ............................................................................................................................... 13 VOLUMEN 82 (2013) ................................................................................................................................ 16 VOLUMEN 81 (2012) ................................................................................................................................ 20 VOLUMEN 80 (2011) ................................................................................................................................ 23 VOLUMEN 79 (2010) ............................................................................................................................... 26 VOLUMEN 78 (2009) .............................................................................................................................. 29 VOLUMEN 77 (2008) ............................................................................................................................... 32 VOLUMEN 76 (2007) ..............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Subcommittee on Postsecondary Education of the Representatives
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 244 036 UD 023 579 TITLE Hispanic Access to Higher Education Hearings before the Subcommittee on Postsecondary Education of the Committee_on Educatioh and Labor. House of Representatives, Ninety-Eighth Congress, First Session (San Juan, Puerto Rico, May 27, 30; Ponce, Puerto Rico, May 31i Houston, Texas, December 2; Chicago, Illinois, December 12, 1983). INSTITUTION Congress of the U.S., Washington, D.C. House Committee on Education and Labor. PUB DATE 83 NOTE 635p.; Sections of this report have very small print. PUB TYPE Legal/Legislative/Regulatory Materials (090) EDRS PRICE MF03/PC26 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Access to Education; Disadvantaged; Enrollment; Federal-Aid; Federal Programs; *Higher Education; *Hispanic Americans; Professional Development; *Puerto Ricans; School Holding Power; Student Financial Aid IDENTIFIERS Congress 98th; *Puerto Rico; *United States ABSTRACT The broad topic of these hearings was Hispanic access to higher education. In the first hearings, held in Puerto Rico, and specifically about Puerto Rico, testimony was given by representatives of public and private academic institutions and student service programs on the following:high school graduation problems; enrollment in higher education and retention of students in degree and certificate programs; major barriers to higher education for Puerto Ricans and programs to overcome those barriers; how federal help (in the form of student financial assistance, institutional development grants, and special services for disadvantaged students) impacts on the students who are able to go to college, university, and technical schools, and how these progrdMs influence the successful completion of school for students in Puerto Rico; and the weaknesses in existing programs and unmet needs in Puerto Rico.
    [Show full text]
  • The Congressional Hispanic Caucus and the Coalitional Representation of Latinxs in the U.S
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy The Congressional Hispanic Caucus and the Coalitional Representation of Latinxs in the U.S. House of Representatives A Dissertation SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY AVRAM EUGENE MUNOZ IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY KATHRYN PEARSON AUGUST 2019 © Copyright by Avram Eugene Munoz 2019 Acknowledgments The process of planning, researching, and writing this dissertation has taken longer than I thought it would when I started graduate school in 2013. Through the years, though, I have received an immense amount of support from many people that has helped me see this project through to the end. First and foremost, I must thank the Department of Political Science at the University of Minnesota. Not only did they admit me to their graduate program, the Department also provided support at all stages of the project. This support made it possible for me to make multiple trips to Washington, D.C. to conduct my archival research and interviews with CHC members and staffers, as well as carry out research on the other components of the dissertation and write everything up. I spent about two months reading through the archived documents of the CHC at the National Archives Building in Washington, D.C. This was both a long time to spend in the reading room, but also nowhere near enough time to delve into the history of the CHC. The archivists helped me figure out which specific records of the CHC’s I might look into, even when sometimes they had to inform me that the records were unavailable because they contained sensitive information.
    [Show full text]
  • Eduardo Bhatia '86 ([email protected]) (Cell: 787.362.6100)
    Eduardo Bhatia '86 ([email protected]) (Cell: 787.362.6100) • Eduardo Bhatia was born on May 16, 1964. Bhatia’s father, Dr. Mohinder Bhatia, was working as an economist at the US Embassy in El Salvador as part of President Kennedy's Alliance for Progress, a program to eradicate poverty. Bhatia's father moved to Puerto Rico from India in 1957. • Bhatia's mother, Dr. Carmen Gautier, was a political science professor at the University of Puerto Rico, one of the first Puerto Rican women to attend Wellesley College and the London School of Economics. • Eduardo Bhatia is the youngest of three siblings. His brother, Andrés Bhatia, is a practicing oncologist in Gainesville, Florida, and his sister, Lisa Bhatia, is an assistant U.S. attorney at the San Juan District office of the U.S. Attorney. • Bhatia attended Princeton University, obtaining his Bachelor's degree in Government and Public Policy from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs in 1986. During Bhatia's university years, he was a member of the Princeton University Democrats and the Princeton University Council. He was an activist in the student movement for divesting the University's endowment from companies doing business in the Apartheid regime in South Africa where Nelson Mandela was jailed. • In May 1986, Bhatia was awarded a Fulbright scholarship to study law, economics and politics in Santiago, Chile for one year. The focus of his research was the need for Chile to transition to a democratic regime where human rights were protected. At that time and during Pinochet's dictatorship, he secretly helped collect and transport pamphlets, flyers and underground documents from human rights groups to Princeton's Library, to help with the efforts to document the struggles in Latin America.
    [Show full text]
  • The Decolonization of Puerto Rico in Light of International Legal Precedents: a Case for Post-Independence Advocacy, 5 B.C
    Boston College Third World Law Journal Volume 5 | Issue 1 Article 4 9-1-1984 The ecoloniD zation of Puerto Rico in Light of International Legal Precedents: A Case for Post- Independence Advocacy Manuel Rodriguez-Orellana Follow this and additional works at: http://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/twlj Part of the International Law Commons Recommended Citation Manuel Rodriguez-Orellana, The Decolonization of Puerto Rico in Light of International Legal Precedents: A Case for Post-Independence Advocacy, 5 B.C. Third World L.J. 45 (1984), http://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/twlj/vol5/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals at Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Boston College Third World Law Journal by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE DECOLONIZATION OF PUERTO RICO IN LIGHT OF INTERNATIONAL LEGAL PRECEDENTS: A CASE FOR POST-INDEPENDENCE ADVOCACY MANUEL RODRiGUEZ-ORELLANA* I. Introduction........................................................ 45 II. Puerto Rico and The U.S.: The Unchanged Economic and Political Struc- ture (1898-1983) .................................................... 48 A. The "Showcase" Model ....... 49 1. Setting the Economic Stage for "Operation Bootstrap" . 50 2. "Commonwealth": Colonialism-by-Consent ...................... 52 B. The Failure of the "Showcase" . 54 l. The "Boot's Trap" ........ 55 2. Commonwealth's Uncommon Uncertainty. .... .... .... .... .... 57 C. Anatomy of a Failure .............................................. 62 III. INTERNATIONAL LEGAL PRECEDENTS FOR POST INDEPENDENCE INTERDEPEN- DENCE .............................................................. 63 A. The New Theater: The World is But The Stage ........................ 63 B. The Lome Conventions: A Play of Post-Independence Relations ..........
    [Show full text]