Eduardo Barcesat

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Born
Eduardo Salvador Barcesat

(1940-01-21) 21 January 1940 (age 85)
Córdoba, Argentina
Yearsactive1966–present
Political party
Eduardo Barcesat
Born
Eduardo Salvador Barcesat

(1940-01-21) 21 January 1940 (age 85)
Córdoba, Argentina
EducationUniversity of Buenos Aires
Years active1966–present
Political party

Eduardo Salvador Barcesat (born 21 January 1940) is an Argentine constitutional lawyer and defender of human rights.[1]

Career

He studied law in Buenos Aires. Between 1960 and 1962 he was assistant in the Chair of Philosophy of Law in charge of Dr. Lucas A. Gioja.

The lawyer Eduardo Barcesat denounced the Minister of Security for the alleged crimes of "violation of public official duties, secrecy and privacy." He helped those who were at risk of "high degree of insecurity." Barcesat, who work for ambitious website, still expects to be supported by the federal prosecutor in his role.

Eduardo's was also active in the case of mothers of Mayo Argentina to find their missing children. In April 2011 he was appointed director of the career of Advocacy at that university of Mothers of Plaza de Mayo.[2]

In May 1962 – at the age of 22 – he graduated as a lawyer, at the Law School of the University of Buenos Aires. In the same faculty, in 1967 he obtained a doctorate in Law and Social Sciences.[citation needed]

In 1965 he entered the teaching career as a second assistant in the Chair of Introduction to Law and Social Sciences, under the direction of Dr. Moisés Nilve.[citation needed]

In 1966 – after the Nightmares and fears, in which the Onganía dictatorship intervened and repressed the Argentine universities – resigned the teaching career.[citation needed]

In 1973 and 1974 – with the return of democracy after a string of military dictatorships – he was appointed assistant professor of Introduction to Law and Social Sciences, in the chair of Dr. Jorge L. Rébori, at the Faculty of Law of the University from Buenos Aires.[citation needed] In 1974 he was assistant professor of Philosophy of Law. That year he was separated from the teaching function by another intervention – the "Ivanissevich mission" – against the University of Buenos Aires.[citation needed]

In 1984 – with the return of democracy after the Argentine civic-military dictatorship (1976–1983) – he was appointed Associate Professor of General Theory and Philosophy of Law (at the Faculty of Law of the University of Buenos Aires).[citation needed]

In the eighties he was a professor of Constitutional Law at the Faculty of Law of the National University of Lomas de Zamora.[citation needed]

He has worked as an expert on Human Rights of the UNESCO.[citation needed]

He was a professor of Constitutional Law, in the Faculty of Law, of the National University of Lomas de Zamora (UNLZ).[citation needed]

He was a founding member and first secretary general of the American Association of Jurists. In 1994 he was a conventional national constituent and participated in the reform of the National Constitution. In 1997 he was appointed regular professor of General Theory and Philosophy of Law at the University of Buenos Aires. In March 2008 he was appointed titular professor of Constitutional Law in the Popular University of Mothers of Plaza de Mayo. In April 2011, he was appointed director of the career of Advocacy at that university.[citation needed]

He is a full professor in the Department of General Theory and Philosophy of Law. Professor of Human Rights and Constitutional Guarantees. School of Law, University of Buenos Aires.[citation needed]

On 1 February 2016, Eduardo Barcesat denounced the president Mauricio Macri and several ministers for the crimes of "violation of the duties of a public official" and "abuse of authority".[3]

Research work done

Private life

References

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