Projects
USD-UABC Legal Education Program
Project Description
Recently, the state of Baja California adopted major policies in anticipation of national level reforms approved by the Mexican Congress and the current administration of President Felipe Calderón. These changes are expected to dramatically transform the functioning of that judicial sector over the next decade. These reforms will implement a transition from Mexico's long-standing inquisitorial system of criminal justice to a more rights-based accusatorial system, similar to that developed in the United States.
The educational exchange program combines training for lawyers and law students with a series of events designed with the express purpose of sharing insights and gauging the process of reform efforts. TBI and USD law school professors will assemble teams of lawyers to travel to Baja California to train Mexican attorneys and law students advocacy court processes, including an introduction to U.S. criminal law and alternative dispute resolution. In turn, Mexican attorneys and judges will attend roundtables and activities at the University of San Diego.
The principle investigators for this project are TBI Director David Shirk and USD School of Law Professor Allen Snyder. Their counterparts in Mexico are UABC Law Faculty Dean Ricardo Dagnino, Professor María Candelaría Pelayo, and Professor Daniel Solorio, as well as UIA Professor David Fernández.
Project Reports :
- Judicial Reform in Mexico: Toward a New Criminal Justice System
Matt Ingram and David A. Shirk
Project Working Papers:
- Judicial Reform in Mexico: Change and Challenges in the Justice Sector
David A. Shirk - State Level Judicial Reform in Mexico:
The Local Progress of Criminal Justice Reforms
Matt Ingram - Una nueva forma de hacer justicia: Análisis descriptivo de la reforma constitucional de 2008
Octavio Rodríguez
May 21 Legal Education Inagural Event Summary [PDF (48 KB)]

