PART I. History1: Pablo Mijangos y González: The Spanish American Concordats (1821-1875)2: Louise Fawcett: Early Internationalists: Bello, Calvo, and Álvarez and Beyond3: Fabia Fernandes Carvalho: Nonintervention, Nonrecognition, and the Articulation of a Mexican Doctrine of International Law: Assessing the Contribution of Isidro Fabela and Genaro Estrada4: Juan Pablo Scarfi: The Montevideo Convention and Its Predecessors5: Arnulf Becker Lorca and Amaya Álvez Marín: Turning International Law against Indigenous Peoples6: Steven L. B. Jensen and Kathryn Sikkink: Latin American and Caribbean Contributions to Human Rights LawPART II. Theories and Methods7: Sergio Puig: Interdisciplinarity and LAIL: The Case of International Economic Law8: Mariana Mota Prado: Law and Development in/from Latin America9: René Urueña: Technoscientific Thought and International Law in Latin America10: George Rodrigo Bandeira Galindo: Critical Approaches to International Law in Latin America11: Ana Micaela Alterio: Feminisms and International Law in Latin America: The Dispute over Protection of Women's Rights in the Inter-American Human Rights System12: Roberto Gargarella: Democracy, Legitimacy, and Authority in International Courts13: Ximena Fuentes: Positivism and Latin American Developments in International LawPART III. Institutions and Practice14: Eduardo Valencia-Ospina and Giovanny Vega-Barbosa: The Latin American States and the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes before the International Court of Justice: Toward Confidence as the Contemporary Pattern15: Elizabeth Salmón: International Humanitarian Law in Latin America: The Role of Truth Commissions16: Manuel A. Gómez: The Dynamic Relationship between Latin American Legal Professionals and International Law: Two Contemporary Examples17: Mónica Pinto: Education in International Law in Latin America18: David Landau: Local Politics and Regional Rights: Reflections on Comparative International Law in the Americas19: Jorge Contesse: The Human Rights Institutions of Latin AmericaPART IV. New Doctrines20: Claudio Grossman Guiloff: Contributions of Latin America to International Law: Reparations for Human Rights Violations21: Alejandro Chehtman: Latin America as a Laboratory of Transitional Justice22: Maryluz Barragan Gonzalez: The Racial Dimension of Latin American International Law23: Lina M.
Céspedes-Báez, Enrique Prieto-Rios, Mónica Mazariegos-Rodas: Community of Practice and the Ius Constitutionale Commune en América Latina24: María Teresa Infante Caffi: Maritime Delimitation in Latin America25: Fernando Lusa Bordin and Federica Paddeu: Latin America and the Codification of the Law of State Responsibility: A Tale of Juridical Equality and NoninterventionPART V. Contemporary Challenges26: Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos and Wayne Sandholtz: Corruption and International Law in Latin America: From the Washington Consensus to Human Rights27: Helena Alviar García and Laura Betancur-Restrepo: Strategic Uses of International Law in Peace Negotiations in Colombia28: Beatriz Garcia: The Promise of Environmental Cooperation in Latin America: Enhancing Forest Conservation through Sustainable Supply Chains29: Alexandra Huneeus: Can the Inter-American Court Tip Us toward Climate Justice?30: Pedro A. Villarreal: Health Law and Pandemics in Latin America31: Rodrigo Polanco: Latin America and the Regulation of Internet and Digital Trade32: Alejandro Chehtman, Alexandra Huneeus, and Sergio Puig: Epilogue: The Birth of a New Canon in Latin American International Law.