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Magistrate Manuel González Oropeza
September 23, 2016 @ 11:45 am - 1:00 pm
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Manuel González Oropeza is a Law graduate of the Faculty of Law of the UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico); he passed his degree examination with an Honorable Mention in 1980. In 1982, he obtained his Master of Public Law, granted by the California University. On December 1995, he obtained the degree of Doctor of Law from the National University. (read more)
Dr. Gonzalez Oropeza has a marked participation in the training of human resources as a teacher, researcher and member of various several collegiate organs and consultative commissions. Since 1982, he has been a Researcher in the Legal Research Institute of the UNAM. He is a founder of the SNI (National System of Researchers), and since 2010 holds level III.
Since November 2006, he serves as Justice of the High Chamber of the Electoral Tribunal of the Federal Judiciary. In June 2010, he became acting member of the Venice Commission to the Council of Europe. He has several publications in Constitutional Law, Legal History and Comparative Law.
Justice Manuel González Oropeza will discuss the topics below from the perspective of his experience as a member of the Mexican Electoral Supreme Court. Since 1947, Mexicans have uninterruptedly elected civilians as Presidents. The democratic transition that started during the second half of the 20th century has been shaped by several reforms that allowed the opposition to break an absolute majority by the official party in the Federal Congress in 1997 and win the presidential election in 2000. During the last 10 years, Mexican democracy has faced challenges that have been addressed by different electoral reforms. Recent changes in the legal and institutional framework focus, among other topics, on the relationship between money and politics, the interaction of public and private political financing, and the related monitoring of advertising of political parties and candidates on the media; as well as in the relationship between representatives and their represented, by allowing reelection in Congress for the first time after the Mexican Revolution and by acknowledging the right to participate to non-partisan independent candidates.