NORMALIZING EXCEPTION: INTERNATIONAL LAW PERSPECTIVES ON DEROGATION OF GUARANTEES IN EL SALVADOR, HONDURAS, AND ECUADOR TO COMBAT ORGANIZED CRIME

Authors

  • Angel Muñoz Carpintero
    Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5377/lrd.v45i1.19387

Keywords:

Human Rights, State of Exception, Organized Crime, Firm Hand, Constitutional Guarantees

Abstract

From El Salvador, the old idea that implementing mano dura policies can be effective to combat organized crime is being exported. Although old, the idea that El Salvador is exporting has an attractive tactic: the application of exception regimes that broadly suspend constitutional guarantees. Honduras and Ecuador, with similar but different citizen security issues, attempted to apply president Bukele’s Plan Control Territorial and failed. This article tries to answer two of the many questions that arise from this model: does sustained regimes of exception violate international human rights law? And why didn’t it work in Honduras and Ecuador?

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Author Biography

Angel Muñoz Carpintero, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras

Honduran lawyer from the National Autonomous University of Honduras (2021), Master of Laws (LL.M.) in International Human Rights Law from the University of Notre Dame Law School (2024), and doctoral candidate in Law (J.S.D.) at the University of Notre Dame Law School.

Tobías Raudales, Creada por IA

Published

2025-03-05

How to Cite


Muñoz Carpintero, A. (2025). NORMALIZING EXCEPTION: INTERNATIONAL LAW PERSPECTIVES ON DEROGATION OF GUARANTEES IN EL SALVADOR, HONDURAS, AND ECUADOR TO COMBAT ORGANIZED CRIME . La Revista De Derecho, 45(1), 235–259. https://doi.org/10.5377/lrd.v45i1.19387

Issue

Section

Sección I: Investigaciones