Ricardo Arredondo
Ricardo Arredondo is the Consul General of the Argentine Republic in Vancouver, where he has just arrived to open this new Consulate.
Prof. Ricardo Arredondo is professor of Public International Law at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA) Law School, at Universidad de Palermo Law School and a member of the Argentine Foreign Service. He is also Professor of “Diplomatic and Consular Theory and Practice” and “International Organizations and Global Governance” at Universidad de Belgrano. He's the author of five books and more than 100 articles in well known journals, newspapers, blogs, etc.
He regularly lectures in Latin America, Europe and the United States on international law and diplomacy, particularly on legal aspects of the use of force, responsibility to protect, and diplomatic and consular law issues.
He has received awards from different professional associations, including the Elena Holmberg Medal and the Raul Prebisch Medal by the Foreign Service Institute of Argentina.
Professor Arredondo has also taught at the Argentine Foreign Service Institute, University of Tucuman (UNT) and Universidad Autonoma de Madrid (UAM) School of Law.
Professor Arredondo received his LL.B. from the University of Tucuman Law School (1986), where he graduated in the top 1% of his class. He received his LL.M. (with Merits) from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) in 1996 and his PhD suma cum laude (the highest distinction) at the University of Buenos Aires in 2011.
As a member of the Argentine Foreign Service, he has served in the UK, Spain and USA. In the Argentine Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he was Head of the Settlement of Economic Disputes Office and served at the Legal Affairs Department,among other positions.
Before joining the Foreign Service, Professor Arredondo practiced law at the Tucuman bar in Argentina (1986-1989) and received a Fellowship by the National Council for Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) of Argentina (1987-1989)
He is also a Counselor at the Argentine Council for International Relations (CARI) and he is member of several other organizations, including the International Law Institute of the National Academy of Law of Argentina, the Argentine Association of International Law and the Observatory of International Politics (University of Palermo).
Phone: see webpage
Address: Vancouver, Canada
Prof. Ricardo Arredondo is professor of Public International Law at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA) Law School, at Universidad de Palermo Law School and a member of the Argentine Foreign Service. He is also Professor of “Diplomatic and Consular Theory and Practice” and “International Organizations and Global Governance” at Universidad de Belgrano. He's the author of five books and more than 100 articles in well known journals, newspapers, blogs, etc.
He regularly lectures in Latin America, Europe and the United States on international law and diplomacy, particularly on legal aspects of the use of force, responsibility to protect, and diplomatic and consular law issues.
He has received awards from different professional associations, including the Elena Holmberg Medal and the Raul Prebisch Medal by the Foreign Service Institute of Argentina.
Professor Arredondo has also taught at the Argentine Foreign Service Institute, University of Tucuman (UNT) and Universidad Autonoma de Madrid (UAM) School of Law.
Professor Arredondo received his LL.B. from the University of Tucuman Law School (1986), where he graduated in the top 1% of his class. He received his LL.M. (with Merits) from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) in 1996 and his PhD suma cum laude (the highest distinction) at the University of Buenos Aires in 2011.
As a member of the Argentine Foreign Service, he has served in the UK, Spain and USA. In the Argentine Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he was Head of the Settlement of Economic Disputes Office and served at the Legal Affairs Department,among other positions.
Before joining the Foreign Service, Professor Arredondo practiced law at the Tucuman bar in Argentina (1986-1989) and received a Fellowship by the National Council for Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) of Argentina (1987-1989)
He is also a Counselor at the Argentine Council for International Relations (CARI) and he is member of several other organizations, including the International Law Institute of the National Academy of Law of Argentina, the Argentine Association of International Law and the Observatory of International Politics (University of Palermo).
Phone: see webpage
Address: Vancouver, Canada
less
InterestsView All (13)
Uploads
Videos by Ricardo Arredondo
Papers by Ricardo Arredondo
While diplomatic asylum remains a contested doctrine in international law, primarily relegated to Latin America, the inviolability of diplomatic missions is not. It is "a cornerstone of international law... universally recognized" and a "fundamental requirement for peaceful relations between States." Even the United Kingdom did not breach this sacred ground during their 7-year stand-off with Ecuador over the extradition of Julian Assange. For Ecuador to do so is to cross a sacred threshold in diplomatic relations.
Arredondo's timely post provides a succinct and nuanced analysis of the current complexity of Latin America's most recent diplomatic crisis. It is valuable to practitioners and policymakers, as well as academics looking to engage in current events. For their part, the international community's reaction has been one of harsh condemnation. Whether the smoke of this crisis will produce heat inside Ecuador remains in doubt.
To see this blog post, and more like it, click on the link below or go to The Hague Journal of Diplomacy:
https://lnkd.in/ecFasPKX
While diplomatic asylum remains a contested doctrine in international law, primarily relegated to Latin America, the inviolability of diplomatic missions is not. It is "a cornerstone of international law... universally recognized" and a "fundamental requirement for peaceful relations between States." Even the United Kingdom did not breach this sacred ground during their 7-year stand-off with Ecuador over the extradition of Julian Assange. For Ecuador to do so is to cross a sacred threshold in diplomatic relations.
Arredondo's timely post provides a succinct and nuanced analysis of the current complexity of Latin America's most recent diplomatic crisis. It is valuable to practitioners and policymakers, as well as academics looking to engage in current events. For their part, the international community's reaction has been one of harsh condemnation. Whether the smoke of this crisis will produce heat inside Ecuador remains in doubt.
To see this blog post, and more like it, click on the link below or go to The Hague Journal of Diplomacy:
https://lnkd.in/ecFasPKX