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Enforcement of fundamental rights by lower courts: Towards a coherent system of constitutional review in Mexico
Alfredo Narváez Medécigo*
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    "textoCompleto" => "<span class="elsevierStyleSections"><span id="sec0005" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">I</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0025">Introduction</span><p id="par0005" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">On July 14&#44; 2011 the Mexican Supreme Court determined that all the courts in the country &#8212;regardless of their federal or local character&#8212; are entitled &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">to disapply the general norms that&#44; in their opinion&#44; are considered to be in violation of the human rights contained in the Federal Constitution and in the international treaties to which the Mexican State is a party</span>&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0005"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">1</span></a> This unusual decision introducing in Mexico <a name="p5"></a>the so-called &#8220;diffused&#8221; or decentralized constitutional review<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0010"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">2</span></a> was reached by the Supreme Court within days after the enactment of a series of long-awaited constitutional amendments that aimed at more effective enforcement of human rights&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0015"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">3</span></a> Procedurally speaking the Supreme Court&#8217;s decision originated from an international judgment issued two years before by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on the case of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span>-<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Pacheco v&#46; Mexico</span>&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0020"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">4</span></a> Given its proximity to the amendments on human rights&#44; however&#44; the Supreme Court&#8217;s decision was considered a follow-up to those desired constitutional changes&#46; Correspondingly&#44; its novel conclusions allowing any court to strike down unconstitutional and&#47;or &#8220;unconventional&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0025"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">5</span></a> statutes were regarded almost unanimously as a favorable and thus welcome adjustment for human rights protection in Mexico&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0030"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">6</span></a> Many believed it was about time for the Mexican legal system to treat local judges as &#8220;grown-ups&#8221;&#59; and for Mexicans to be able to enforce their constitutional rights without over-relying on the outdated and highly complex constitutional writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0035"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">7</span></a> Legal scholars <a name="p6"></a>and practitioners rejoiced at the inclusion of ordinary courts in constitutional scrutiny&#59; the Mexican Supreme Court had taken a decisive step towards the decentralization of justice and the enforcement of basic rights&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0040"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">8</span></a></p><p id="par0010" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Not even a month went by&#44; however&#44; when &#8212;based on the Supreme Court decision&#8212; a statute was struck down by a local court&#46; On August 8<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span>&#44; 2011 an appeals court in the state of Nuevo Le&#243;n deemed a provision of the state&#8217;s criminal code unconstitutional and&#44; as a result&#44; refused to apply it&#46; The verdict &#8212;called the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo L&#233;on</span> case<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0045"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">9</span></a>&#8212; emerged in the context of Mexico&#8217;s &#8220;War on Drugs&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0050"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">10</span></a> The case concerned the indictment of two local police officers who had been arrested for supposedly reporting on military activities to criminal organizations&#46; The local policemen had allegedly used their cell phones to inform members of organized crime about a special &#8220;anti-drugs&#8221; operation being carried out by the navy in a Monterrey suburb&#46; The state prosecutor indicted these men for &#8212;among other offences&#8212; a felony labeled under state law as &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Crimes against the administration and procurement of justice&#46;</span>&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0055"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">11</span></a> While the trial judge initially ruled that the suspects were to be held in custody to answer the charges&#44; the state court of appeals carried out <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">ex officio</span> the diffused constitutional review and modified the ruling&#46; The appellate judge felt that the code&#8217;s provisions wrongfully delegated the power to define a felony to an authority different from the legislative power&#46; For this reason&#44; the state code&#8217;s provisions were a so-called &#8220;criminal law in blank&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0060"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">12</span></a> prohibited by Article 14 <a name="p7"></a>of the Federal Constitution&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0065"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">13</span></a> He concluded that the defendants could not be further prosecuted and ordered their immediate release&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0070"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">14</span></a></p><p id="par0015" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Alarmed by this outcome &#8212;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> was not open to further appeal<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0075"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">15</span></a>&#8212; at a time when Mexican legal institutions were being threatened by organized crime and the government was spending heavily to confront it&#44; a group of federal senators from three major political parties responded in October with a bill &#8220;to regulate the exercise of diffused control&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0080"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">16</span></a> The senators were clearly more concerned about the possibility of letting guilty offenders get away unpunished than about individuals imprisoned on the grounds of an article already considered unconstitutional by a court of law&#46; Their intention is that whenever a lower court<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0085"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">17</span></a> deems a general norm unconstitutional or unconventional &#8212;and therefore refuses to apply it to the controversy at hand&#8212; the decision against the validity of such norm can be further reviewed by a federal court&#46; Specifically&#44; the bill proposes a mechanism whereby the federal Attorney General is entitled to challenge before a federal Three-Judge Panel Circuit Court<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0090"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">18</span></a> every decision by a lower court that carries out diffused constitutional review&#46; The ordinary judgment will not have any effects until the federal court confirms the invalidation of the general norm or&#44; otherwise&#44; until the federal Attorney General refuses to challenge the judgment<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0095"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">19</span></a>&#46;This means that the final decision will always rest on a federal organ&#46; This proposal is currently being discussed in the Senate and&#44; as it has support from the three major national parties&#44; is very likely to be approved within the next few months&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0100"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">20</span></a></p><p id="par0020" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall"><a name="p8"></a>Based on events directly following the Supreme Court&#8217;s decision authorizing diffused constitutional review&#44; it did not take long for the initial wave of excitement to prove unjustified or&#44; in any case&#44; highly exaggerated&#46; Already before the decision almost every local judgment in Mexico could be reviewed by the federal judiciary through the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#46; If those few judgments that could not be reviewed through Amparo &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">e&#46;g</span>&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span>&#41; will now end up anyway in a federal court &#40;as envisaged in the senators&#8217; bill&#41;&#44; then it is clear that the establishment of diffused review did not bring the intended judicial decentralization&#46; Someone might argue that the Supreme Court&#8217;s good intentions are just being blocked by a short-sighted group of congressmen&#46; Not even before the senators presented their proposal&#44; however&#44; it would have been reasonable to think that a solution to the serious deficiency of human rights&#8217; enforcement in Mexico could be merely the general authorization of courts to quash legislation&#46; Any legal system that lacks consistency extends an invitation to chaos&#46; In this sense&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> was a fortunate coincidence&#46; Irrespective of whether the judge was right or wrong when he concluded the unconstitutionality of the local criminal code &#40;which is still debated and more a task for criminal law scholars&#41;&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0105"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">21</span></a> that controversial ruling touched upon a far more important issue&#46; It showed that the question of which organ should be entitled to strike down unconstitutional statutes in a given constitutional framework &#8212;and when it should be able to do it&#8212; was not only a matter of whim or &#8220;turf &#8221; between the ordinary and the constitutional courts&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> evidenced that this problem is also a matter of legal predictability and&#44; for that reason&#44; a fundamental <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Rule-of-law</span> question&#46; As such&#44; constitutional judicial review represents an issue that should have been addressed with thoughtfulness and prudence&#46;</p><p id="par0025" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">In contrast&#44; the continuous legal adjustments just described &#8212;which basically &#8220;patch up&#8221; previous calculations&#8212; suggest a lack of both vision and planning in the restructuring of Mexican constitutional review&#46; For this reason&#44; they raise a red flag about the effectiveness of the system governing the enforcement of fundamental rights in the country&#46; This paper is motivated by this concern and analyzes the Mexican constitutional judicial review system&#46; It specifically explores whether the development of constitutional scrutiny has genuinely succeeded or at least set favorable conditions for enabling Mexico to more effectively enforce fundamental rights &#8212;the essential prerogatives and freedoms to which every person as such is entitled under the constitution&#46; While the structure of the Mexican legal system has fluctuated between two fairly consolidated models of judicial constitutional review &#8212;the American and continental European models&#8212; it has so far disregarded at least one major factor strongly embedded within the rules of both&#58; The bulk of constitutional scrutiny regarding fundamental rights should be a task fulfilled by ordinary courts empowered for such purpose within the ordinary adjudication <a name="p9"></a>procedures&#46; Constitutional jurisdiction&#44; on the other hand&#44; should only play a guiding role &#8212;even when solving a specific controversy on its merits&#8212; in the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0110"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">22</span></a> While the rules of these two models leave the great majority of legal controversies concerning fundamental rights outside constitutional jurisdiction&#44; they guarantee that the interpretation of the few leading cases that reach the constitutional jurisdiction impact the rest of the legal system&#46; Instead&#44; the Mexican rules of constitutional scrutiny have fostered excessive dependence on specialized constitutional courts&#46; Simultaneously&#44; they have weakened the guiding role of constitutional interpretation in the legal realm&#46; This situation results in an ineffective and complex system of constitutional review that fails both to enforce constitutional guidelines and wholly protect fundamental rights&#46;</p><p id="par0030" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Before this assertion is further developed&#44; it is necessary to mention that this work mainly rests on two assumptions which&#44; albeit controversial&#44; cannot be further discussed here&#46; First&#44; the enforceability of fundamental rights is an essential element of the Rule-of-law&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0115"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">23</span></a> Secondly&#44; and of equal importance&#44; is that the Rule-of-law is a virtue of the legal system which is first and foremost &#8212;albeit not exclusively&#8212; entrusted to the judiciary&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0120"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">24</span></a> Stated differently&#44; an effective justice system is a pre-condition of the Rule-of-law but it is not the Rule-of-law itself&#46; This said&#44; it is appropriate to begin by explaining concisely the two most consolidated models of constitutional scrutiny in the world&#46; Particular emphasis is put on how these prototypes have dealt with the issue of fundamental rights enforcement&#46;</p></span><span id="sec0010" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">II</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0030">Models of Constitutional Review and Fundamental Rights</span><p id="par0035" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">There are two major consolidated models that serve as prototypes of constitutional scrutiny in modern legal systems&#46; Due to their origins&#44; they are usually referred to as the &#8220;American&#8221; and the &#8220;continental European&#8221; models&#46; <a name="p10"></a>Whereas the former developed in the United States in the 19<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century and goes back to the US Supreme Court&#8217;s seminal judgment in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Marbury v&#46; Madison</span>&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0125"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">25</span></a> the latter emerged in Austria and Germany just before World War II and is based instead on the ideas of Hans Kelsen&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0130"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">26</span></a> For this reason&#44; these models are frequently associated with the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">common law</span> and <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">civil law</span> traditions&#46; While there is already much literature comparing these two models&#44; most efforts emphasize their differences with respect to the judicial body authorized to review the constitutionality of statutes&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0135"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">27</span></a> Since every court in the US has the power to strike down statutes on the basis of their constitutionality&#44; this model is known as diffused or decentralized&#46; In the continental European model&#44; on the other hand&#44; one single constitutional court has a monopoly on these powers&#59; thus&#44; this model is also called concentrated or centralized&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0140"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">28</span></a> This variation &#8212;which results in different ways of attaining consistency in constitutional interpretation&#8212; is typically explained as the product of different conceptions of the &#8220;separation of powers&#8221; based on each legal tradition&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0145"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">29</span></a> In the United States&#44; the judiciary has historically enjoyed equal status before the other two branches of government and&#44; as a result&#44; constitutional review of statutes has been assumed since its establishment as a power of the courts&#46; It is thus usually referred to as <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">judicial review</span>&#46; In contrast&#44; European courts have traditionally played a subordinate role with respect to Parliament&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0150"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">30</span></a> In continental Europe there has existed an historic distinction between the notions of judicial review &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">richterliches Pr&#252;fungsrecht</span>&#41; and constitutional review &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Verfassungskontrolle</span>&#41;&#44; as well as of the entities empowered to carry them out&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0155"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">31</span></a></p><p id="par0040" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall"><a name="p11"></a>In the American model the ability to review the constitutionality of legislative action &#8212;and directly provide a remedy for a breach&#8212; represents a significant judicial power regardless of whether the courts involved are federal or local&#46; Constitutional review is thus carried out directly within ordinary judicial procedures and only insofar it is necessary to solve the legal dispute brought before the court&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0160"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">32</span></a> While these review powers include the ability to evaluate the constitutionality of laws such as statutes&#44; the court&#8217;s decision regarding the unconstitutionality of a statute has &#8212;in principle&#8212; only effects <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span>&#46; This means&#44; in lay terms&#44; that such a judgment is binding exclusively upon the parties to the litigation&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0165"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">33</span></a> This does not&#44; however&#44; mean that the model disregards predictability or that it fosters unequal treatment before the law&#46; Constitutional scrutiny is carried out within the ordinary trial&#46; This implies that the constitutional interpretation is also subject to the traditional common law mechanisms aimed at achieving consistency &#8220;between law as declared and as actually administered&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0170"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">34</span></a> Firstly&#44; a conclusion regarding the unconstitutionality of a statute is subject to revision before a higher court in the judicial hierarchy&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0175"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">35</span></a> Secondly&#44; the equivalent constitutional cases that follow ought to be ruled &#8212;in line with the doctrine of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">stare decisis</span><a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0180"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">36</span></a>&#8212; exactly as the higher court has determined&#46; Logically&#44; as the US Supreme Court is the highest court in the judicial hierarchy&#44; its decisions declaring the unconstitutionality of statutes in fact prevent these laws&#8217; further application&#46; Through these mechanisms the American model reaches uniformity in the interpretation of constitutional rules among the different courts of the land&#46; At the same time&#44; it avoids that every controversy becomes an issue of statutory unconstitutionality&#46; To summarize&#44; the diffused model embraces a general duty for the judiciary to safeguard the supremacy of the constitution vis-&#224;-vis the activity of the State&#46; The judgments determining the invalidity of statutes&#44; however&#44; have the possibility to reach a higher court&#46; This higher court&#8217;s constitutional interpretation &#8212;albeit with direct effects only for the <a name="p12"></a>parties within the dispute&#8212; spreads to the rest of the legal system through the binding precedent rule&#46;</p><p id="par0045" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">In the continental European model&#44; on the other hand&#44; the power of review of acts of the executive corresponds to lower courts&#46; The authority to strike down unconstitutional statutes&#44; however&#44; is monopolized by a legal body that &#8212;albeit frequently jurisdictional&#8212; is structurally separate from the ordinary judiciary&#46; This model assumes only a specialized constitutional body has the authority to review the constitutionality of legislative &#40;or Parliamentary&#41; action&#46; For this reason&#44; lower courts may not directly carry out constitutional review &#8212;not even to refuse to apply &#8220;unconstitutional&#8221; statutes in particular cases&#8212; and legislation may only be struck down by the constitutional court by means of specialized procedures&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0185"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">37</span></a> These are extraordinary mechanisms which &#8212;though usually related to an ordinary legal controversy&#8212; run separately from the ordinary adjudication procedures&#46; Consequently&#44; if the constitutional court invalidates a statute because it is deemed unconstitutional&#44; such statute is immediately expelled from the legal system&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0190"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">38</span></a> Since the constitutional court&#8217;s judgments are immediately binding upon every authority &#8212;executive&#44; legislative&#44; and judicial&#8212; its decisions regarding statutes are said to have <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">erga omnes</span> or universal effects&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0195"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">39</span></a> This however does not imply that the ordinary judiciary does not play a crucial role in the constitutional review of legislative acts&#46; The constitutional validity of legislation still could be a main factor in establishing the &#8220;legal correctness&#8221; of an administrative act or even a judgment&#46; For this reason the regular courts are always entitled to initiate a specialized mechanism &#8212;also called &#8220;referral&#8221; procedure&#8212; at the constitutional court to review a statute&#46; While this constitutional mechanism is admissible only if this is needed to solve the case at hand&#44; it emphasizes the importance of lower courts in the implementation of the constitutional guidelines&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0200"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">40</span></a> Nevertheless&#44; the model developed within a legal tradition where the character of a judge as a law maker is rather feared <a name="p13"></a>than favored<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0205"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">41</span></a> and where the doctrine of binding precedent does not play a predominant role in legal predictability&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0210"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">42</span></a> The invalidity of legislation &#8212;even if initially detected by a court within an ordinary trial&#8212; should therefore be declared by a specialized organ whose decisions have &#8220;force of statute&#8221; and thus are immediately binding to every other authority in the system&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0215"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">43</span></a></p><p id="par0050" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">For predictability sakes it is necessary to be aware of the different consistency rules surrounding the scrutiny of statutes on each of these two models&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0220"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">44</span></a> Yet to focus exclusively on this difference is definitely too simplistic and could be misleading&#46; The error is especially common when conceptualizing constitutional review in systems following the continental European model&#46; Indeed&#44; the terminology &#8220;diffused&#8221; versus &#8220;concentrated&#8221; can lead to the erroneous belief that in concentrated systems constitutional review is monopolized by the constitutional court&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0225"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">45</span></a> However&#44; not even when it provides for the review of legislation the concentrated model depends exclusively on the activity of the constitutional jurisdiction&#46; As mentioned above&#44; while it is true that in centralized systems only the constitutional court may strike down statutes&#44; lower courts play a crucial role in this process by means of the &#8220;referral&#8221; procedure&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0230"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">46</span></a> Furthermore&#44; in continental European systems the enforcement of constitutional supremacy also goes beyond the acts of the legislative power&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0235"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">47</span></a> As it happens in the US&#44; the ordinary judiciary in the continental European model contributes substantially with constitutional review of other kinds of government activity&#46; It is a precondition for the Rule-of-law that the activity of the State as a whole is legally bound to the &#8220;law in the layman sense&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0240"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">48</span></a> &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; to the Constitution&#41;&#46; Consequently&#44; constitutional systems have developed mechanisms to supervise that not only acts of the legislative but also of the executive and even of the judiciary are carried out within the constitutional boundaries&#46; These rules pursue that such acts of authority are in line especially with the constitutional provisions granting fundamental rights&#46; Yet if <a name="p14"></a>fundamental rights are actually &#8220;rights&#44;&#8221; this means that someone is legally bound to their enforcement despite a careless legislative&#44; a negligent administration&#44; an arbitrary trial judge&#44; or a combination of all of these&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0245"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">49</span></a> It is only reasonable to expect that a constitutional court alone cannot fulfill all the obligations resulting from these entitlements and&#44; therefore&#44; to conclude that the system has to rely on the ordinary jurisdiction for that matter&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0250"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">50</span></a></p><p id="par0055" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Related and equally mistaken is the idea surrounding the distribution of judicial competences in systems with specialized constitutional jurisdiction&#46; It is frequently affirmed that the distribution of tasks between ordinary and constitutional courts in this model is given by the application&#44; respectively&#44; of ordinary and constitutional law&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0255"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">51</span></a> The fact is that ordinary courts apply constitutional law no less than constitutional courts interpret ordinary law provisions&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0260"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">52</span></a> For this reason&#44; additional criteria apply when distinguishing constitutional and ordinary judicial review&#46; Since constitutional supremacy binds every authority without regard&#44; lower courts must also safeguard fundamental rights as part of their judicial activities&#46; Constitutional primacy is implemented in centralized systems mainly through the general obligation of courts to interpret ordinary laws &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">in conformity with the constitution&#8221;</span><a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0265"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">53</span></a> and &#8212;if such interpretation is not possible&#8212; through deferral to the constitutional court&#46; It is also true&#44; however&#44; that &#8220;insofar as ordinary law is explicated constitutionally&#44; especially through fundamental rights&#44; the lower courts are functionally also constitutional courts&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0270"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">54</span></a> Stated differently&#44; lower courts can confront at the outset any act of authority with a constitutional rule related to fundamental rights&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0275"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">55</span></a> Nevertheless&#44; the fact that fundamental rights enforcement <a name="p15"></a>is a shared responsibility has an important implication&#58; the only relatively straightforward delimitation of these duties between lower and constitutional courts is given apropos the declaration of invalidity of acts of Parliament&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0280"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">56</span></a> As a matter of fact most systems that follow the continental European model assume that the validity of the constitution can be reinforced by granting <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">individuals as such</span> the prospect of enforcing fundamental rights &#8212;additionally to the ordinary mechanisms of appeal&#8212; through a specific constitutional judicial procedure&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0285"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">57</span></a> It is both practically and theoretically impossible for a constitutional court&#44; however&#44; to review every single action of the State&#46; As the constitutional jurisdiction &#8220;cannot and should not be a super jurisdiction of appeals&#44;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0290"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">58</span></a> more complex criteria are needed to allocate these constitutional responsibilities when the validity of legislation is not at stake&#46;</p><p id="par0060" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Particularly in systems following the continental European model &#8212;but not exclusively on them&#8212; the constitutional jurisdiction&#8217;s ability to review lower court judgments upon individual challenge has led to the development of further doctrinal standards&#46; They intend to distinguish ordinary from &#40;formally&#41; constitutional issues involving fundamental rights&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0295"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">59</span></a> These standards can either be established directly in the constitutional procedural law or &#8220;self-imposed&#8221; by the judiciary through constitutional interpretation&#46; They distribute the tasks among lower and constitutional courts based rather on the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">role</span> that each kind of court plays &#8212;in view of its specific operational capabilities and status in the constitutional order&#8212; in reinforcing the validity of the constitution&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0300"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">60</span></a> On one hand&#44; the enforcement of fundamental rights is assumed first and foremost as a duty of lower courts which are empowered for such purpose within the ordinary procedures&#46; These courts are therefore granted with powers either to &#8220;disapply&#8221; legislation &#40;in diffused systems&#41; or to refer to the constitutional court &#40;in concentrated ones&#41;&#46; The specialized constitutional mechanism&#44; on the other hand&#44; serves principally an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">exemplary function</span><a name="p16"></a>&#8212;comparable to that of a lighthouse<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0305"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">61</span></a>&#8212; given the authority conferred to the decisions issued by the constitutional jurisdiction&#58; The constitutional interpretation achieves general validity either through the doctrine of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">stare decisis</span> or through the &#8220;force of statute&#8221; effects of the constitutional judgment&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0310"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">62</span></a> Even when a case is deemed unconstitutional on its merits&#44; this is not considered a subsidiary review whose main purpose is to correct the mistakes of the lower court&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0315"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">63</span></a> Firstly&#44; the constitutional jurisdiction enjoys rejection powers that are highly discretional&#46; The mere individual challenge is not sufficient to compel the court to carry out the review&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0320"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">64</span></a> Secondly&#44; if the case is ultimately admitted for revision&#44; the revision is subject to strict deference rules to the activity of lower courts&#46; The specialized constitutional procedure is thus usually limited to a &#8220;comprehensibility&#8221; review&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0325"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">65</span></a> Roughly speaking&#44; this means that as long as the lower court&#8217;s conclusion is comprehensible or reasonable within the acknowledged techniques of interpretation &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; not arbitrary&#41; the original decision will be affirmed&#46; Irrespective of whether the constitutional jurisdiction would have rather favored another interpretative method &#8212;and thus reached a different outcome&#8212; a comprehensible ordinary judgment stays untouched&#46;</p><p id="par0065" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Ignorance of these assertions risks minimizing the essential role that the ordinary judiciary plays in any system that aims at fulfilling the Rule-of-law&#46; As shown below&#44; this oversight might lead to expect from the constitutional jurisdiction results that it cannot possibly achieve&#46; Put differently&#44; it might mislead law makers to look for solutions in order to improve the justice system where these are not to be found&#46;</p></span><span id="sec0015" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">III</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0035">The Mexican System between Two Models &#40;1847-2011&#41;</span><p id="par0070" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Constitutional review in Mexico since as early as the second half of the 19<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century has been primarily a function of the judiciary&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0330"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">66</span></a> In reality&#44; the Mexican system has fluctuated between the American and the continental European models without becoming either one completely&#46; The Mexican system initially adopted structures and procedures that &#8212;with notable differences regarding the rules to attain consistency in the application of the law&#8212; were clearly inspired by the American model&#46; As the Mexican system <a name="p17"></a>evolved&#44; several mechanisms typical of the continental European model were introduced&#46; Even though these additions operated mainly within an American-based structure&#44; by the early 21<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century the influence of European constitutionalism on Mexican rules was so noticeable that the Mexican Supreme Court was regarded &#8212;at least in the official discourse&#8212; as a &#8220;genuine constitutional court&#8221; in the sense of the continental European paradigm&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0335"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">67</span></a> This drifting between models&#44; however&#44; did not turn the Mexican system into a &#8220;best of all worlds&#8221; solution&#46; Quite the contrary&#44; it resulted in an almost unintelligible hybrid in which lower courts have been steadily limited in playing any significant role in constitutional review&#46; Stated differently&#44; since only the federal courts in Mexico have been entitled &#8212;predominantly through the constitutional writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8212; to evaluate the constitutionality of law&#44; the so-called &#8220;evolution&#8221; of Mexican constitutional review implied a constant expansion in the size&#44; authority and budget of federal tribunals&#46; While the addition of some European-based mechanisms to the powers of the Supreme Court boosted this trend&#44; lower courts have progressively become mere bureaucratic facilities which add little value in the enforcement of constitutional rules&#46; The outcome is an intricate system of constitutional review that relies excessively on the federal judiciary and &#8212;in what is the other side of the same coin&#8212; fosters unequal treatment before the law&#46;</p><span id="sec0020" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">1</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0040">American Influence on Mexican Judicial Review &#40;1847-1987&#41;</span><p id="par0075" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">American-based features within the Mexican system of constitutional review are not hard to disentangle&#46; Even though Mexico has never belonged to the common law tradition&#44; from the very beginning of its independent existence the country has basically followed the judicial model developed by its northern neighbor&#46; Since the enactment of the first Mexican Constitution in 1824&#44; ordinary judicial activities were divided between federal and state courts that coexisted all over the country<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0340"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">68</span></a> and &#8212;just like in the United States&#8212; these federal and state tribunals represented separate judicial spheres responsible for adjudicating controversies arising under either federal or state law&#44; respectively&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0345"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">69</span></a> Given that this federalist arrangement of the courts was basically reiterated both in the Constitution of 1857 &#8212;where constitutional <a name="p18"></a>review became exclusively judicial&#8212; as well as in the current Constitution enacted in 1917&#44; the judicial structure in which the Mexican rules of constitutional scrutiny for the most part have developed is clearly American&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0350"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">70</span></a> Ever since constitutional review became a judicial task in Mexico&#44; the Mexican legal system only partially adopted the rules of the &#8220;diffused&#8221; American model&#46; Stated differently&#44; while the powers of constitutional review were given to the judiciary&#44; they were not given to all courts but rather only to federal courts &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Poder Judicial de la Federaci&#243;n</span>&#41;&#46; Moreover&#44; these federal courts could only carry out constitutional review within a specialized procedure known as <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Juicio de Amparo</span>&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0355"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">71</span></a> Based on the European notion regarding the role of legislators that still prevailed in Mexico during the 19<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0360"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">72</span></a> the Constitution of 1857 channeled constitutional review exclusively through a specialized constitutional writ instead of making it part of ordinary federal or local judicial procedures&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0365"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">73</span></a></p><p id="par0080" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Ironically&#44; the specialized writ on which the Mexican system based constitutional review was also significantly inspired by the American legal tradition&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0370"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">74</span></a> The generations of scholars who have long venerated the originality of the Mexican <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo notwithstanding</span>&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0375"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">75</span></a> a clear evaluation shows that this writ <a name="p19"></a>was actually an adaptation of the American writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">habeas corpus</span> to the 19th century Mexican legal system&#46; Whereas habeas corpus had developed mainly as a common law mechanism to avoid arbitrary imprisonment in England &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; the courts of the King&#8217;s Bench were empowered to issue the order regardless of written legislation providing for it&#41;&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0380"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">76</span></a> its American version had features which were rather attractive for system that &#8212;albeit interested first and foremost in legally protecting constitutional rights&#8212; had inherited its consistency rules from the civil law tradition&#46; Although habeas corpus was still essentially a common law injunction in the US at the local level and therefore did not require written legislation to be issued by a state court&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0385"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">77</span></a> the writ faced more restrictions at the federal level&#46; The so-called &#8220;Article III courts &#8212;including the Supreme Court&#8212; were powerless to issue common law writs of habeas corpus&#44; and could only act pursuant to express statutory jurisdiction&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0390"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">78</span></a> Put differently&#44; the writ of habeas corpus &#8212;through which the American <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">federal</span> judiciary safeguarded the constitutional liberty of detainees&#8212; was a procedure sanctioned by Congress&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0395"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">79</span></a> Perhaps more important for the Mexican system of constitutional review&#44; however&#44; was the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> effects of the decisions where the courts in the US declared the invalidity of statutes&#46; The creators of the Mexican constitutional writ saw in the American system &#8212;or rather in Tocqueville&#8217;s description of it&#8212; an acceptable solution to overcome the &#8220;Separation of Powers&#8221; issue that would arise if a court determined that a law was unconstitutional&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0400"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">80</span></a> It is certainly not a coincidence that both jurists who are acknowledged as the architects of the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> &#8212;Manuel Rej&#243;n<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0405"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">81</span></a> and <a name="p20"></a>Mariano Otero<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0410"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">82</span></a>&#8212; made explicit reference to how in American law the individual effects of a constitutional decision prevented the courts from becoming legislators and&#44; accordingly&#44; adopted the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> rule in their proposals&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0415"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">83</span></a></p><p id="par0085" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">The system established by the Constitution of 1857 was based on at least two fundamental misconceptions of the American system that came to influence the subsequent evolution of the Mexican rules of constitutional review&#46; First&#44; even if one accepts the claim that a specialized judicial procedure was needed to safeguard constitutional rights and obligated Mexico to adopt an institution that &#8220;in North-America&#8230; &#91;had&#93; produced the best effects&#44;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0420"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">84</span></a> the concentration of this procedure solely within the federal judiciary hints at a misconstrued &#8212;or in any case incomplete&#8212; picture of the American legal system of that time&#46; While it is undeniable that in the United States the federal courts had habeas corpus jurisdiction&#44; this jurisdiction was so restricted<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0425"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">85</span></a> that nearly all habeas corpus litigation took place in state courts&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0430"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">86</span></a> When Mexico granted exclusive jurisdiction on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> to federal courts<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0435"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">87</span></a> in effect banning <a name="p21"></a>state courts from any serious involvement in constitutional review&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0440"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">88</span></a> the Mexican rules completely overlooked the fact that &#8212;at least as far as the protection of individual constitutional rights is concerned&#8212; the much admired American system heavily relied &#40;and still does&#41; on the activity of state judges&#46; The mechanisms through which the American model attained consistency in constitutional interpretation throughout the different courts of the country went equally unnoticed by the Mexican framers of 1857&#46; Fixated on the &#8220;advantages&#8221; that the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> effects in American constitutional decisions could bring vis-&#224;-vis &#8220;Separation of Powers&#44;&#8221; the Mexican deliberations disregarded the precept of binding precedent that served as a basis for common law&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0445"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">89</span></a> The later establishment of an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> procedure like <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> as practically the only available mechanism of constitutional review &#8212;deliberately excluding other procedures that could have made up for the lack of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">stare decisis</span> doctrine in Mexico<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0450"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">90</span></a>&#8212; instead served to fragment the Mexican legal order&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0455"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">91</span></a> This situation institutionalized at the outset a system that fostered unequal treatment under the same constitution&#46;</p><p id="par0090" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">After <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> was left as the only available mechanism of constitutional review within the Mexican system&#44; this constitutional writ started &#8212;so to speak&#8212; to adjust to the Mexican reality&#46; It began to develop&#44; understandably&#44; substantive and procedural rules of its own&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0460"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">92</span></a> Nonetheless&#44; the Mexican legal <a name="p22"></a>system continued to follow for decades the evolution of American legal institutions and tried to use them as a prototype &#8212; albeit with major differences&#46; While most of the specific rules of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> were defined largely through the continuous amendments that took place during the second half of the 19<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0465"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">93</span></a> many of these changes &#8212;particularly those regarding the acts open to review&#44; but also some concerning the rules to attain consistency in constitutional interpretation&#8212; were still based on what Mexican legislators assumed to be the trend in the United States&#46; For instance&#44; both the antebellum judgment in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Martin v&#46; Hunter&#8217;s Lessee</span><a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0470"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">94</span></a> as well as the misinformed belief that American laws granted federal courts habeas corpus jurisdiction to state prisoners&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0475"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">95</span></a> contributed in Mexico to the extension of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> to challenge judgments&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0480"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">96</span></a> Consequently&#44; a mechanism that was originally conceived to protect individuals solely from executive or legislative power<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0485"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">97</span></a> was rapidly widened to include judiciary acts&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0490"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">98</span></a> Since <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> was not restricted &#8212;as American habeas corpus was&#8212; to safeguard individual liberty and Mexican local courts lacked any jurisdiction for constitutional review&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0495"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">99</span></a> the decision to include judgments as part of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> opened the gate to the establishment of a hierarchy between federal and state courts for non-criminal issues&#46; This subsequently gave way to the use of the writ as an ordinary mechanism in civil appeals&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0500"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">100</span></a> Not surprisingly&#44; <a name="p23"></a>it was also during this period that Mexican federal legislators gave up on their resistance towards legal precedent and developed the concept of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span>&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0505"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">101</span></a> In contrast to the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">stare decisis</span> doctrine that inspired this idea&#44; however&#44; this interpretation &#40;decided by the Mexican Supreme Court&#41; had to be repeated several times to achieve authoritative force and become binding&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0510"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">102</span></a></p><p id="par0095" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">While it is remarkable that the rules of constitutional review which were developed even before the outburst of the Mexican Revolution &#40;1910-1917&#41; outlived this difficult period&#44; it is perhaps more astonishing that they remained essentially the same for almost another century&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0515"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">103</span></a> Indeed&#44; the continuous adjustments carried out in Mexico after the enactment of the Constitution of 1917 and throughout most of the 20<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century mostly involved the redistribution of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> jurisdiction among the federal courts&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0520"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">104</span></a> Notably&#44; they did not include greater participation of state courts in the direct enforcement of the Constitution nor did they represent any significant change to the &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo-</span> centered&#8221; system that had emerged during the previous judicial regime&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0525"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">105</span></a> In order to deal with the enormous caseloads that resulted from such an expansive Amparo policy&#44; the Mexican Supreme Court had already by 1934 been divided into four specialized chambers &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e&#46;</span> civil&#44; criminal&#44; administrative&#44; and labor&#41; and the number of associate Justices had doubled&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0530"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">106</span></a> Since the effects of this internal reorganization were barely noticeable in the face of increased backlogs in the Supreme Court&#44; the Mexican Congress in 1951 decided to rely once again on the American experience&#46; Inspired by the reform that had created the United States Courts of Appeals sixty years earlier&#8212; Mexican <a name="p24"></a>legislators established the federal Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Tribunales Colegiados de Circuito</span>&#41;&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0535"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">107</span></a> Initially six for the whole country&#44; the so-called <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Colegiados</span> were assigned to take over &#8212;in a scheme that brings to mind the American writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">certiorari</span>&#8212; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> cases of lesser significance that had quickly overwhelmed the Supreme Court&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0540"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">108</span></a> As one might expect of procedural rules that remain essentially unchanged&#44; however&#44; the number of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> writs filed did not drop at all&#59; during the following years these new federal courts rapidly increased both in number and authority&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0545"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">109</span></a> Meanwhile&#44; state courts &#8212;just like any other court not dealing with <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> cases&#8212; were explicitly banned from any kind of constitutional interpretation within their ordinary activities&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0550"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">110</span></a></p></span><span id="sec0025" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">2</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0045">A &#8220;Turn&#8221; towards Continental Europe &#40;1987-2011&#41;</span><p id="par0100" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">While it is commonly assumed that the failure to reduce backlogs in the federal judiciary led the Mexican system to change its orientation and transform the Mexican Supreme Court in 1987 into a specialized constitutional court&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0555"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">111</span></a> the amendments enacted that year did not radically alter the trend already started with the creation of the Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts&#46; To be precise&#44; what was officially praised as a new system of responsibilities for the Supreme Court &#8220;that would restore &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">sic</span>&#41; its status as the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">sole</span> and supreme interpreter of the constitution&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0560"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">112</span></a> represented in fact the mere transfer of most of the court&#8217;s <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> jurisdiction &#8212;original and appellate&#8212; to the already large and growing number of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Colegiados</span>&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0565"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">113</span></a> As the Supreme Court only <a name="p25"></a>kept appellate jurisdiction on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> writs in which the constitutional validity of general laws had been challenged&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0570"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">114</span></a> many commentators concluded that the court was mainly taking on the functions of a constitutional court&#46; None of these adjustments regarding the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#44; however&#44; actually represented a continental European review mechanism&#46; Most importantly&#44; none of them touched upon the roots of the caseload problem either&#46; For instance&#44; Mexican state courts were not empowered to review the constitutional validity of any ordinary statute by means of a &#8220;referral&#8221; procedure&#46; Neither could they directly refuse to apply any general law already found unconstitutional by the federal judiciary&#8217;s <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span>&#46; In addition&#44; these amendments did not include any real deference rule for the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> judges to the activity of lower courts&#46; The interpretation of ordinary law decided by non-federal courts within ordinary adjudication could therefore easily be turned into a constitutional dispute&#46; In sum&#44; it is clear that the initial characterization of the Mexican Supreme Court as a &#8220;constitutional court&#8221; in the late 1980s was misinformed&#44; as it did not involve any intention &#8212;either structurally or procedurally &#8212; to adopt the continental European model of constitutional review&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0575"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">115</span></a></p><p id="par0105" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">The Mexican government&#8217;s discourse regarding a specialized constitutional court &#8212;already quite popular in other Latin-American countries<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0580"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">116</span></a>&#8212; quickly extended to Mexican scholarship as well&#46; Suddenly well-known legal scholars and practitioners began to favor the adoption of the continental European model and described Mexican judicial reform as a process headed inevitably in that direction&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0585"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">117</span></a> This understanding &#8212;whether accurate or not&#8212; significantly shaped the evolution of the Mexican system&#46; Indeed&#44; a series of constitutional amendments approved in 1994 gave the Supreme Court a pair of mechanisms that were characteristic of European constitutional courts&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0590"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">118</span></a> In conjunction with a significant reduction in the number of associate <a name="p26"></a>Justices&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0595"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">119</span></a> these reforms gave the Supreme Court exclusive jurisdiction on &#8220;abstract constitutional review&#8221; of statutes &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">acciones de inconstitucionalidad</span>&#41;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0600"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">120</span></a> as well as on a wide range of controversies between elected bodies &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">controversias constitucionales</span>&#41;&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0605"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">121</span></a> These procedures nonetheless entailed significant variations from the European model which bore heavily on the consistency of constitutional interpretation throughout the whole Mexican system&#59; particularly with respect to the enforcement of fundamental constitutional rights&#46; Even though both of these new mechanisms empowered the Supreme Court to invalidate with effects <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">erga omnes</span> unconstitutional statutes and thereby expel laws from the legal system&#44; a qualified majority of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">eight</span> Justices out of eleven was necessary&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0610"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">122</span></a> Whatever its official purpose&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0615"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">123</span></a> this majority requirement implicitly made the constitutional validity of a general rule depend on the nature of the challenging entity and&#44; consequently&#44; created a somewhat artificial distinction between constitutional review of legislation within the Supreme Court&#46; In <a name="p27"></a>other words&#44; a statute challenged on identical grounds before the same Justices could be considered both unconstitutional and constitutional depending on whether the suit is brought by an individual in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> or by an agency in a procedure of &#8220;abstract constitutional review&#46;&#8221; Aside from the evident problem this poses for legal predictability&#44; it misrepresents the European model as well as perverts the exemplary or guiding function that &#8212;as mentioned above&#8212; specialized constitutional mechanisms should play in the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0620"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">124</span></a></p><p id="par0110" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Even though the Supreme Court already had discretion to take over jurisdiction on any <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> case that corresponded to the federal Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0625"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">125</span></a> and could exercise &#8212;in &#8220;proper constitutional questions&#8221;&#8212; additional appellate jurisdiction regarding their judgments &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo directo en revisi&#243;n</span>&#41;&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0630"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">126</span></a> the Mexican Congress assumed that a further increase of the Supreme Court&#8217;s control over its own docket would allow it &#8220;to perform its constitutional court function more efficiently&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0635"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">127</span></a> As a consequence&#44; the 1994 reforms also entitled the Supreme Court to delegate &#8212;through general rules &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">acuerdos generales</span>&#41; issued by the court sitting <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">en banc</span>&#8212; its <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> jurisdiction to the Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts on all cases dealing with issues in which <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span> &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; binding precedent&#41; had already been established&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0640"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">128</span></a> The authority to delegate jurisdiction was soon extended to other <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> disputes&#46; This was allowed if the Supreme Court considered &#8212;regardless of the existence of binding precedent&#8212; that it facilitated &#8220;a better administration of justice&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0645"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">129</span></a> It is clear nonetheless that these powers did not represent discretional rejection powers like those granted in other countries to the constitutional jurisdiction when ordinary judgments are challenged for alleged fundamental rights violations&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0650"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">130</span></a> In fact&#44; the quasi-legislative abilities of the <a name="p28"></a>Mexican Supreme Court to transfer its <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> jurisdiction to the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Colegiados</span> implied instead that all individual claims alleging the violation of a constitutional right were to be solved by a constitutional authority in the formal sense&#46; In this way&#44; the idea that ordinary jurisdiction had no role in constitutional interpretation was reinforced&#46; So was&#44; implicitly&#44; the notion that the mere filing of an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> by an individual should be sufficient to compel the constitutional court to deliver a judgment&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0655"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">131</span></a> Furthermore&#44; the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> &#8212;whose regulation had not experienced significant transformation<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0660"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">132</span></a>&#8212; continued to be the only mechanism by which individuals could challenge directly the constitutional validity of any act&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0665"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">133</span></a> As the Supreme Court could already influence the amount and specialization of lower federal courts&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0670"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">134</span></a> these delegation powers contributed to boost the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> caseloads and the exponential growth of the federal judiciary&#46; It was certainly not a coincidence that just during the 15 years following the introduction of these arrangements the number of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Colegiados</span> increased by 137&#37;&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0675"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">135</span></a></p><p id="par0115" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">While it is evident that the Mexican system&#8217;s &#8220;turn&#8221; towards the continental European model did not represent a complete transformation but rather a selective adoption of a few mechanisms&#44; this somewhat ideological change of direction in Mexico&#8217;s constitutional review paradigm undoubtedly helped question &#8212;though not eliminate&#8212; several myths that had been built around the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#46; In the beginning of the 21<span class="elsevierStyleInf">st</span> century &#8212;as the idea of the constitutional court became widespread within Mexican jurisprudence&#8212; more scholars and practitioners started to insist on the need for a major transformation of this writ as well&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0680"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">136</span></a> This in turn resulted in a series of reform proposals endorsed by the Supreme Court<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0685"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">137</span></a> which aimed at &#8220;modernizing <a name="p29"></a>and enabling it &#91;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#93; to become once again an effective instrument for the protection of fundamental rights&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0690"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">138</span></a> Though it took several years for these specific suggestions to have an impact on the agenda of Mexican legislators&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0695"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">139</span></a> they established the basis for modifications to <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> which &#8212;in light of the highly regarded &#8220;Constitutional Reform on Human Rights&#8221;&#8212; were finally enacted in June 2011&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0700"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">140</span></a> These constitutional amendments &#8212;as well as the writ&#8217;s regulations currently being discussed by Congress<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0705"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">141</span></a>&#8212; are largely based on proposals that had been sponsored by the Supreme Court a decade earlier&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0710"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">142</span></a> These adjustments widened specifically the Amparo<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">&#8217;</span>s scope of protection to International Human Rights Law&#59;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0715"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">143</span></a> extended its object of scrutiny to challenge omissions&#59;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0720"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">144</span></a> broadened the concept of standing to those with an &#8220;individual or collective legitimate interest&#8221;&#59;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0725"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">145</span></a> redefined the criteria to issue temporary injunctions&#59;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0730"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">146</span></a> and &#8212;in writs against ordinary final judgments&#8212; compelled the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Colegiados</span> to solve every claim contained in the constitutional submission &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; not to remand the decision to the lower court immediately <a name="p30"></a>after having detected the first violation&#41;&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0735"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">147</span></a> Furthermore&#44; the Supreme Court was empowered &#8212;once more under the constitutional court rationale<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0740"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">148</span></a>&#8212; to declare with <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">erga omnes</span> effects &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; binding upon everyone in the legal system&#41; the unconstitutionality of statutes challenged in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> procedures&#46; In order for this general declaration to actually take place&#44; however&#44; the norm in question cannot be related to tax law&#59; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span> must have already been established &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; it cannot occur with one judgment&#41;&#59; and &#8212;as it was stipulated already for procedures of &#8220;abstract constitutional review&#8221; of statutes and for controversies between legislative bodies&#8212; a qualified majority of eight Justices is required&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0745"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">149</span></a></p><p id="par0120" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">As one can notice&#44; the evolution of the Mexican system of constitutional review not only steadily excluded lower courts from any direct involvement in constitutional interpretation and&#44; consequently&#44; in the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0750"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">150</span></a> It also increasingly depended for these activities on a complicated arrangement of specialized procedures&#46; Mainly because its rules of constitutional review give differentiated treatment to mechanisms that all the same define the constitutional validity of general norms&#44; the Mexican legal system resulted in an &#8220;exception regime&#46;&#8221; Stated bluntly&#44; it became a system that fosters unequal treatment before the law&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0755"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">151</span></a> Even though the recently enacted constitutional amendments to <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> will probably speed up this procedure&#44; they do not contain any measure that will reverse the trend of specialized constitutional jurisdiction progressively becoming a &#8220;super jurisdiction of appeals&#8221; that solves ordinary legal disputes&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0760"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">152</span></a> While the new constitutional rules did not include a mechanism that authorizes ordinary courts to carry <a name="p31"></a>out constitutional review directly within ordinary procedures &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; a &#8220;referral&#8221; right&#41;&#44; they did reduce the already meager deference of Amparo judges to ordinary tribunals&#46; With the excuse that these constitutional procedures took way too long&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0765"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">153</span></a> the new rules of Amparo curtailed even more lower courts&#8217; authority as final arbiters of ordinary legal disputes&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0770"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">154</span></a> In addition&#44; the creation of new federal bodies called &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Plenos de Circuito</span>&#8221; &#8212;or Circuits <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">en banc</span><a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0775"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">155</span></a>&#8212; will hopefully solve potential contradictions between the different federal courts of a same circuit&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0780"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">156</span></a> This measure&#44; nonetheless&#44; also hints towards a system in which the federal judiciary &#8212;ironically under the discourse of judicial decentralization<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0785"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">157</span></a>&#8212; will more and more determine through Amparo the meaning of state laws&#46; In sum&#44; these changes did not alter the prevailing notion of the role that specialized constitutional procedures should play in the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46; They did not foster the exemplary function of the constitutional jurisdiction with respect to fundamental rights protection&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0790"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">158</span></a></p><p id="par0125" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">After continuous reforms Mexico in 2011 still departed substantially from any of the two consolidated models of constitutional review that &#8212;at different periods and for different reasons&#8212; officially served as its inspiration&#46; The Mexican legal system steadily demanded from the specialized constitutional courts results which they could not possibly deliver&#46; By doing so&#44; it jeopardized the effective enforcement of fundamental rights in the country&#46; As shown below&#44; however&#44; those were not the last relevant changes to the system&#46;</p></span></span><span id="sec0030" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">IV</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0050">The <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Varios File 912&#47;2010</span> and the Incorporation of Diffused Constitutional Review in Mexico</span><p id="par0130" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Within days after the approval of the &#8220;Constitutional Reform on Human Rights&#8221; &#8212;and of the long-awaited modification of the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8212; the Supreme Court gave an additional twist to the Mexican system of constitutional review&#46; As mentioned above&#44; on July 14&#44; 2011 the court reached a decision that introduced diffused constitutional review onto the Mexican legal system&#46; Though technically not a legal judgment&#44; the Supreme Court&#8217;s resolution in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010</span><a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0795"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">159</span></a> explicitly authorized all Mexican judges <a name="p32"></a>to &#8220;disapply&#8221; legislation if they considered &#8212;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">ex officio</span> within their ordinary activities of adjudication&#8212; that such laws violated the human rights granted by the Constitution and&#47;or the international covenants ratified by Mexico&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0800"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">160</span></a> Since a significant part of this decision was grounded on the new wording of Article 1 of the Constitution&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0805"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">161</span></a> the Supreme Court&#8217;s conclusions were regarded almost undisputedly by Mexican academics as a welcome follow-up to the recently approved constitutional amendments&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0810"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">162</span></a> The quasi-judicial incorporation of diffused review into the legal system was instantly celebrated by scholars and practitioners as a necessary step towards the effective enforcement of fundamental rights in Mexico&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0815"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">163</span></a> A more careful analysis&#44; both of the legal context in which this particular verdict was reached and the immediate consequences that followed the court&#8217;s decision&#44; shows that the initial euphoria was in fact unjustified&#46; Since this resolution introduced even more exceptions into an already inconsistent scheme&#44; the resulting system of constitutional review &#8212;described by the Mexican Supreme Court as &#8220;concentrated on one part and diffused on the other&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0820"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">164</span></a>&#8212; threatened legal predictability and thus the nation&#8217;s Rule-of-law&#46; Since the Supreme Court&#8217;s decision did not affect in any way the dependence position that the Mexican legal system had built upon the constitutional writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> the benefits of this supposed empowerment of lower courts to enforce fundamental rights were only apparent&#46;</p><span id="sec0035" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">1</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0055">The &#8220;Judicial&#8221; Incorporation of Diffused Review</span><p id="par0145" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Procedurally speaking&#44; the Supreme Court&#8217;s resolution authorizing diffused constitutional review goes back to an international judgment issued in <a name="p33"></a>2009 by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on the case of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla Pacheco v&#46; Mexico</span>&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0825"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">165</span></a> This case dealt with the forced disappearance of Rosendo Radilla Pacheco by members of the Mexican Army in the state of Guerrero in 1974&#46; Almost 35 years later &#8212;after a long and complicated trek before domestic and international tribunals by Mr&#46; Radilla&#8217;s relatives&#8212; the Mexican State was found internationally responsible for multiple violations to the American Convention of Human Rights as well as the Inter-American Convention on Forced Disappearance of Persons&#46; In a nutshell&#44; Mexico was found accountable for the use of military jurisdiction to hinder the swift prosecution of crimes of a non-military nature&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0830"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">166</span></a> Accordingly&#44; the Inter-American Court ordered the Mexican State to carry out several activities &#8212;including specific amendments to its internal regulation&#8212; as a form of reparation to the victims&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0835"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">167</span></a> Not long after the international judgment was published in the official domestic journal&#44; the Mexican Supreme Court took the initiative and opened a rather uncommon procedure to help determine whether the international verdict contained specific obligations for the Mexican federal judiciary&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0840"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">168</span></a> The Supreme Court concluded not only that <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span> required that the federal judiciary undertake certain actions&#44; but also that these obligations included more than just the specific measures ordered in the operative paragraphs of the international judgment&#46; According to the Mexican Supreme Court the obligations to the federal judiciary could be deduced also from the Inter-American Court&#8217;s reasoning to the case&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0845"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">169</span></a> As the Inter-American Court had held in one of its considerations that <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">&#8220;the Judiciary shall exercise a &#8216;control of conventionality&#8217; ex officio between domestic regulations and the American Convention</span> &#91;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">of Human Rights</span>&#93;&#44; evidently within the framework of its respective competences and the corresponding procedural regulations&#44;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0850"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">170</span></a> a majority of the Supreme Court Justices gathered from this statement &#8212;interpreted in conjunction with the new wording of the Mexican Constitution that had been approved in June 2011<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0855"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">171</span></a>&#8212; an obligation to authorize every court in the country to strike down <a name="p34"></a>unconstitutional and&#47;or &#8220;unconventional&#8221; legislation&#46; This unusual conclusion received widespread academic and media support for it was valued as an important &#8220;adjustment towards judicial decentralization&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0860"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">172</span></a></p><p id="par0150" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">No matter how inconvenient someone might have considered the traditional exclusion of lower Mexican courts from any constitutional review&#44; it is highly debatable whether the Supreme Court&#8217;s switch represents a necessary legal conclusion from the amendments to Article 1 of the Constitution or &#8212;what appears even more difficult&#8212; from <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span>&#46; Even if one accepts that a constitutional court should be able to declare on its own initiative &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; outside of a legal procedure&#41; the model of constitutional scrutiny that a country has to follow&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0865"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">173</span></a> the truth is that neither the constitutional reforms nor considerations of the Inter-American Court on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span> support the diffused model&#46; On the contrary&#44; it is fairly clear that the new wording of Article 1 binds all Mexican authorities to protect and guarantee human rights &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">within the framework of their competences</span>&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0870"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">174</span></a> The constitutional amendments of Amparo that were enacted simultaneously did not contain &#8212;as mentioned above<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0875"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">175</span></a>&#8212; any specific competence adjustment in order to reduce the Mexican system&#8217;s reliance on the specialized constitutional mechanisms or on the federal judiciary&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0880"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">176</span></a> If the amendments lacked any modification of competences regarding the existing mechanisms of constitutional review&#44; then it appears rather problematic to justify such a radical change of model on the basis of the constitutional reform&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0885"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">177</span></a> A similar objection applies to the Mexican Supreme Court&#8217;s reading of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span>&#46; While an obligation is nowhere to be found in that judgment &#8212;not even implicitly&#8212; that requires the Mexican State to establish <a name="p35"></a>a diffused or decentralized system of constitutional review&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0890"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">178</span></a> the Inter-American Court unambiguously held that the &#8220;conventionality review&#8221; between domestic regulations and the American Convention of Human Rights was to be carried out by the judiciary &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">evidently within the framework of its respective competences and the corresponding procedural regulations</span>&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0895"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">179</span></a></p><p id="par0155" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">This paragraph of the international judgment &#8212;which was rather an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">obiter dictum</span> remark in matters of military jurisdiction<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0900"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">180</span></a>&#8212; was taken completely out of context to justify diffused review&#46; As mentioned&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span> dealt with the illegitimate use of Mexican military tribunals to prevent the swift prosecution of crimes of a non-military nature&#46; The Inter-American Court held that cases dealing with human rights violations should only be heard in civilian courts&#46; The international court considered that Mexican regulations that transferred criminal proceedings in relation to the &#8220;forced disappearance of persons&#8221; to military courts in detriment of the victim&#8217;s rights violated two international conventions&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0905"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">181</span></a> In line with the Inter-American Court&#8217;s opinion&#44; the &#8220;unconventional&#8221; domestic provisions that should have never been applied by the Mexican judiciary were those that transferred such cases to the military courts&#46; The only domestic regulations that could have been subject to further adjustment based on this paragraph<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0910"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">182</span></a> were &#8212;at the most&#8212; Article 57 of the Code of Military Justice and Article 10 of the Amparo Law&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0915"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">183</span></a> The former gave military courts jurisdiction over non-military crimes when the perpetrator was a member of the Mexican armed forces&#59; the latter &#40;apparently&#41; prevented the victims of such crimes from challenging &#8212;for being contrary to the American Convention&#8212; the allocation of military jurisdiction through the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8212;&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0920"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">184</span></a> The fact that &#8212;for better or for worse&#8212; constitutional <a name="p36"></a>and conventional review of statutes in Mexico was concentrated in the specialized procedures before the federal judiciary was however never depicted as a violation&#46; Put differently&#44; the model of constitutional review was never described as the reason for which the cases dealing with human rights violations ended up at military courts&#46; At no time did the Inter-American Court deem the Mexican constitutional review system contrary <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">per se</span> to any applicable convention&#46; It is nonetheless surprising that the Mexican Supreme Court went on to overrule its own <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span> &#40;i&#46;e&#46; precedent&#41; regarding the system of constitutional review<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0925"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">185</span></a> based on an international judgment that had barely anything to do with the system as such&#46;</p></span><span id="sec0040" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">2</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0060"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">The</span> Nuevo Le&#243;n <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Judgment and the Bill on Diffused Control</span></span><p id="par0160" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">The Supreme Court&#8217;s resolution on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010</span> had not even been officially published before a lower Mexican court carried out diffused constitutional review for the first time specifically based on that decision&#46; Due to the state in which the case originated&#44; this controversial verdict was soon branded by academia as the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> judgment&#46; Indeed&#44; on August 8&#44; 2011 a state court of criminal appeals in the city of Monterrey established within an ordinary proceeding that article 224&#44; part V&#44; of the Criminal Code for the State of Nuevo Le&#243;n<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0930"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">186</span></a> violated &#8220;the human right to penal legality &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">sic</span>&#41; established in Article 14&#44; paragraph 3&#44; of the Federal Constitution&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0935"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">187</span></a> In short&#44; the local appellate judge deemed the state criminal code unconstitutional as it delegated the power to define a criminal offence to an authority different from the legislative&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0940"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">188</span></a> The case dealt with the trial <a name="p37"></a>of two local police officers who had been arrested while apparently reporting on military activities to unidentified members of organized crime&#46; The policemen had allegedly used their cell phones to inform others of the exact position of a naval convoy in direct violation of an internal police directive that prohibited the use of non-official communications equipment while on duty&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0945"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">189</span></a> As the state criminal code penalized any public servant related to the procurement and administration of justice who &#8220;&#91;did&#93; not comply with an order issued and legally notified by his&#47;her superior official&#44; without a lawful reason to do so&#44;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0950"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">190</span></a> the state prosecutor indicted the suspects and requested that they be tried&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0955"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">191</span></a> On appeal&#44; however&#44; the state judge ruled that such provision gave to the administrative authorities the power to establish a criminal offence which&#44; pursuant to the Mexican Constitution&#44; corresponded solely to the legislature&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0960"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">192</span></a> Since the unconstitutionality of the article implied that it should not be applied to this specific case&#44; the appellate judge held that the two defendants could not be further prosecuted and ordered their immediate release&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0965"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">193</span></a></p><p id="par0165" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Had it been delivered within a coherent diffused system of constitutional review&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> could have represented the paragon of the Rule-of-law&#46; Regardless of its conclusions&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0970"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">194</span></a> this case would have evidenced a legal system in which constitutional law prevailed over all other jurisdictions&#59; where basic rights were enforced despite statutes that may encroach upon them&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0975"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">195</span></a> In Mexico&#44; however &#8212;already crammed with forced distinctions about constitutional scrutiny&#8212; the case revealed the importance of mechanisms to ensure the consistency of constitutional interpretation&#59; specifically with respect to the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46; To be precise&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> involved an undeniably constitutional question that was decided &#8220;diffusely&#8221; by the highest criminal court of a state&#46; For this reason&#44; the case should have been able to be further reviewed by the final arbiter of the constitution &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; by the Mexican Supreme Court&#41;&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0980"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">196</span></a> If the final arbiter&#8217;s interpretation would have been in accord with that of the state court &#8212;or if it would have decided not to admit the case for review&#8212; the corresponding verdict should have become a precedent binding for every other court within that state&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0985"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">197</span></a> Instead&#44; within the mixed <a name="p38"></a>system introduced by <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010</span>&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0990"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">198</span></a> the verdict in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> exemplified both unequal treatment before the law and impunity&#46; First&#44; the case showed that there were no adequate mechanisms to provide for all other individuals convicted or accused pursuant to an article held unconstitutional to be released from prison&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn0995"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">199</span></a> If the article was indeed contrary to the Constitution&#44; such a general measure would have not only been fair from an equality point of view&#46; It would have also reinforced the supreme character of the constitutional guidelines in the Mexican legal system&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1000"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">200</span></a> On the other hand&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n showed</span> that the novel hybrid system did not allow for a hypothetically &#8220;flawed&#8221; invalidation to be corrected by the constitutional jurisdiction either&#46; Stated differently&#44; a potentially mistaken declaration of unconstitutionality carried out <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">ex officio</span> by merely one state judge<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1005"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">201</span></a> could not be overturned by the specialized constitutional courts&#46; Since the felony for which the suspects were accused did not have a victim &#40;who might have challenged the verdict&#41; and state prosecutors lack standing within <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> procedures&#44; the constitutional interpretation of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span> was not subject to any further review&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1010"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">202</span></a> If <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n&#8217;s</span> interpretation of the Constitution was actually mistaken&#44; then the State was wrongfully affected in its ability to punish crimes effectively&#46;</p><p id="par0170" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">It was apparently this last impression &#8212;at a time when Mexican legal institutions have been seriously threatened by organized crime and substantial financial and human resources have been invested in the so-called &#8220;War on Drugs&#8221;&#8212; that led to immediate legislative action with regard to the new system of constitutional review&#46; On October 26&#44; 2011 a group of senators from the three major political parties in Mexico presented a bill intended &#8220;to regulate the exercise of diffused control&#46;&#8221;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1015"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">203</span></a> The senators are obviously concerned about the possibility of letting guilty offenders get away rather than the prospect of individuals being imprisoned pursuant to an article held unconstitutional by a court of law&#46; Their intention is that whenever a lower court deems a law unconstitutional or &#8220;unconventional&#8221; &#8212;and therefore refuses to apply it to the controversy at hand&#8212; the decision against the validity of such law can be further reviewed by a federal Three-Judge Panel Circuit Court&#46; The proposed bill specifically proposes a mechanism that permits the federal Attorney General &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Procurador General de la Rep&#250;blica</span>&#41; to challenge &#8212;at <a name="p39"></a>his or her discretion&#8212; any decision in which a lower court carries out diffused constitutional review&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1020"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">204</span></a> Since ordinary judgments do not take formal effect until the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Colegiado</span> confirms the invalidity of the general norm &#8212;or the federal Attorney General refuses to challenge the verdict<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1025"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">205</span></a>&#8212; the final decision will always depend on a federal body&#46; This proposal is currently being discussed in Senate committees&#46; Since it receives support from the nation&#8217;s three major parties&#44; the bill will probably be approved and become law within this legislative period&#46; Clearly&#44; this proposed &#8220;regulation on diffused constitutional review&#8221; will in effect open the gate to federal review of all judgments<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1030"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">206</span></a> that could not have been formerly challenged before the federal judiciary&#46;</p><p id="par0175" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">If one of the reasons for integrating diffused constitutional review into the Mexican system &#8212;and what led to its overwhelming approval by legal scholars&#8212; was the decentralization of Mexican justice&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1035"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">207</span></a> then the target was clearly missed&#46; Indeed&#44; the Supreme Court&#8217;s attempt to decentralize constitutional interpretation among state judiciaries will result&#44; ironically&#44; in even more dependency on the federal judiciary&#46; In other words&#44; if nearly every lower court ruling could be challenged through the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#59; and those few cases that could not be challenged before &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">e&#46;g</span>&#46;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nuevo Le&#243;n</span>&#41; will now inevitably wind up before a federal body&#59; then the integration of diffused review into the Mexican system would represent a strengthening of judicial centralization&#46; If one adds to this the fact that the latest constitutional reforms on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> do not modify in any way the dominating role of this writ in the Mexican system&#44; then one thing becomes evident&#58; The integration of diffused review in Mexico contributed to make the intervention of federal <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Colegiados</span> more of a rule than an exception&#46; It is clear that even after the &#8220;Constitutional Reform on Human Rights&#8221; the trend in Mexico is still to rely increasingly on constitutional jurisdiction for tasks that in both the American and continental European models correspond primarily to lower courts&#46; Putting aside the fact that the use of constitutional jurisdiction as a &#8220;subsidiary super jurisdiction of appeals&#8221; for fundamental rights&#8217; violations is doomed to failure right from the start&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1040"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">208</span></a> then an additional distinction regarding constitutional interpretation further complicates the Mexican system&#8217;s capacity to provide legal predictability&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1045"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">209</span></a> The constitutional interpretation carried out by a Three-Judge Panel <a name="p40"></a>Circuit Court may only become <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span> in case of unanimous ruling&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1050"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">210</span></a> This prevents the constitutional interpretation decided by lower courts from spreading to the rest of the legal system&#58; as long as only a simple majority within the Colegiado &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; two judges&#41; affirms the lower court&#8217;s decision&#44; this interpretation will not become binding upon the courts of the circuit&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1055"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">211</span></a></p><p id="par0180" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">In sum&#44; the integration of diffused constitutional review into the &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo-</span>centered&#8221; Mexican legal system creates even more fragmentation and uncertainty&#46; The system still fosters the creation of multiple regimes under the same Constitution&#58; There will be&#44; on the one hand&#44; unconstitutional laws still applying to the many who cannot afford to bring a legal suit&#59; and there will be&#44; on the other hand&#44; perfectly constitutional laws not applying to the few who manage to convince a judge of their invalidity&#46; For that same reason&#44; the system can neither wholly protect fundamental rights nor facilitate the rule of constitutional law&#46; Whereas predictability serves as the basis of any legal system congruent with the Rule-of-law&#44;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1060"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">212</span></a> Mexican constitutional review does not seem to be moving in that direction either&#46; Though impossible to analyze in this work&#44; specific reform solutions are needed to make of the Mexican system a coherent one&#46; The ideas just presented give a good basis to think about some of the measures that law makers should be considering&#46; These might include the modification of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> procedures to turn the writ exclusively into a mechanism for &#8220;arbitrariness control&#8221; like other more consolidated systems do&#46; The measures could also include the establishment of discretional rejection powers in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo directo</span> when filed against judgments of the supreme courts of the states&#46; This would reduce the caseload of federal courts while empowering local judiciaries&#46; There are also a few ideas regarding the consistency in the constitutional interpretation that should be considered&#46; For instance&#44; to establish the same majority requirement to all the Supreme Court judgments &#8212;regardless of the procedure in which a judicial decision is taken&#8212; could be a step forward against artificial differentiations in constitutional review of statutes&#46; Both the inclusion of unconstitutional tax legislation as subject to the Supreme Court&#8217;s <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">erga omnes</span> or universal decisions and the recognition of constitutional interpretation as binding &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; the establishment of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span>&#41; as of the first judgment are also steps in that direction&#46; If &#8220;diffused&#8221; constitutional review is eventually confirmed by the federal Congress&#44; the so-called <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo &#8220;contra leyes&#8221;</span> &#40;against statutes&#41; should be <a name="p41"></a>eliminated and the state&#8217;s highest court&#8217;s decisions regarding the constitutionality of a federal or local statute may only be challenged by individuals before the Supreme Court&#46; In sum&#44; any analysis of these and other proposals should be realized keeping in mind always that rights conferred by a constitution are aimed for everyone and not just a few&#46; If the constitutional rights of individuals cannot be judicially enforced&#44; then these are not really &#8220;rights&#8221;&#46; Similarly&#44; if rights are not universal&#44; then they should not be called &#8220;fundamental&#8221;&#46;</p></span></span><span id="sec0045" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><span class="elsevierStyleLabel">V</span><span class="elsevierStyleSectionTitle" id="sect0065">Conclusions</span><p id="par0185" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Regardless of the chosen model of constitutional review&#44; the bulk of judicial constitutional scrutiny concerning fundamental rights should be carried out by lower courts empowered for such purpose within ordinary adjudication procedures&#46; Correspondingly&#44; the procedural rules should guarantee that the interpretation of the few leading cases that are reviewed by the constitutional jurisdiction impact the rest of the legal system&#46; For predictability sakes it is necessary to be aware of the different consistency rules surrounding constitutional review of statutes in the American and the continental European models&#46; To focus exclusively on this aspect&#44; however&#44; could be misleading when conceptualizing the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46; Once these are taken into consideration&#44; it becomes clear that constitutional scrutiny may not be either wholly monopolized by a specialized constitutional tribunal nor channeled through ordinary adjudicatory procedures only&#46; The distribution of fundamental rights&#8217; issues between ordinary and constitutional jurisdiction in both models is therefore a functional one&#46; It is based rather on the role that each kind of court plays &#8212;in view of its specific operational capabilities and status in the constitutional order&#8212; in reinforcing the validity of the Constitution&#46; Stated differently&#44; constitutional scrutiny concerning fundamental rights is in the first place a task for lower courts empowered for such purpose within ordinary adjudicatory procedures&#46; Depending on the model of constitutional review&#44; this lower court empowerment is implemented either by granting courts a &#8220;referral&#8221; right or by conferring them the power to &#8220;disapply&#8221; laws directly&#46; The specialized constitutional procedures&#44; on the other hand&#44; serve rather an exemplary function given the authority conferred to the decisions of a constitutional court&#46; The interpretation decided by the constitutional jurisdiction has general validity either through &#8220;force of statute&#8221; effects in the judgment or through the doctrine of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">stare decisis</span>&#46; Even though constitutional jurisdiction deals with individual cases on their merits&#44; which could lead to the subsequent overruling of ordinary judgments&#44; constitutional review of judgments is not considered a subsidiary revision or an appeal&#46; Its main purpose is not to correct the mistakes of a lower court in the application of ordinary laws&#46; First&#44; the mere challenge of an ordinary judgment by an individual is never sufficient to compel the constitutional tribunals to carry out a review&#46; <a name="p42"></a>Second&#44; if the case is ultimately admitted for revision&#44; the review process is subject to strict deference rules towards the ordinary courts&#46; This means that such analysis is usually limited to a &#8220;comprehensibility&#8221; review&#46;</p><p id="par0190" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">The system established in Mexico during the second half of the 19<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century had at least two fundamental misconceptions of the American system that would mark the subsequent evolution of the Mexican rules of constitutional scrutiny&#46; This misunderstanding fostered&#44; from the very beginning&#44; an excessive dependency on the federal judiciary for the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46; It also led to the fragmentation of the constitutional order&#46; It is undeniable that in the United States the federal courts at that time had habeas corpus jurisdiction&#46; This jurisdiction&#44; however&#44; was so restricted that actually almost all of the habeas corpus litigation took place before the state judiciaries&#46; In Mexico the jurisdiction on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> was given exclusively to courts within the federal judiciary and&#44; conversely&#44; state courts were implicitly banned from any serious involvement in constitutional review&#46; With this choice the Mexican framers overlooked completely that &#8212;at least regarding the protection of constitutional rights&#8212; the much admired American system relied heavily &#40;and still does&#41; on state judges&#46; What is more&#44; the mechanisms through which the American model attained consistency in constitutional interpretation throughout the different courts of the land went equally unnoticed by the Mexican framers of that time&#46; Fixated on the &#8220;advantages&#8221; that the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> effects in American constitutional decisions could bring vis-&#224;-vis &#8220;Separation of Powers&#44;&#8221; the Mexican deliberations disregarded the rules of binding precedent that served as a basis for common law&#46; The subsequent establishment of an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> procedure like the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> as practically the only mechanism of constitutional review &#8212;deliberately excluding other procedures that could have made up for the lack of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">stare decisis</span> doctrine in Mexico&#8212; brought therefore fragmentation to the Mexican legal order&#46; It also institutionalized at the outset a system that fostered unequal treatment under the same constitution&#46; Whereas the multiple conditions set to the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span> limited its capacity to compensate for this fragmentation&#44; the whole system fostered the dependence on the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> procedure&#46; This caused an inconvenient overreliance on the federal judiciary for the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46;</p><p id="par0195" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">The so-called transformation of the Mexican Supreme Court into an &#8220;authentic constitutional court&#8221; during the last years of the 20<span class="elsevierStyleInf">th</span> century did not represent the adoption of the continental European model of constitutional review but rather the selective incorporation of a few of its mechanisms to the existing judicial structures&#46; While these changes boosted even further the number of federal courts and the Mexican system&#8217;s dependency on the Amparo procedure for fundamental rights&#8217; enforcement&#44; they also generated artificial differentiations in regards to the constitutional interpretation of statutes which gave way to an &#8220;exception regime&#8221;&#46; This change of direction in the Mexican system towards a specialized constitutional court represented&#44; on one hand&#44; the transfer of most of the Supreme Court&#8217;s <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> jurisdiction <a name="p43"></a>to federal Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts and&#44; on the other&#44; the incorporation of a few mechanisms typical of continental European systems&#46; Lower Mexican courts&#44; however&#44; were not vested with a referral mechanism to question the constitutional validity of a statute within ordinary procedures&#44; nor were they empowered to carry out the disapplication of general norms held unconstitutional by the federal judiciary&#8217;s <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Jurisprudencia</span>&#46; Similarly&#44; these amendments did not include any real deference rule for the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> judges as to the interpretation of ordinary law carried out by non-federal courts through ordinary adjudication&#46; Not surprisingly&#44; during the 15 years following the introduction of these arrangements the already significant number of Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts increased more than twofold&#46; Even though the Supreme Court was finally empowered to declare the unconstitutionality of statutes with binding effects to everyone &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; with effects <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">erga omnes</span>&#41;&#44; majority requirements and procedural exceptions created a somewhat artificial distinction between the constitutional review of legislation&#46; Aside from the evident problem that this poses for legal predictability&#44; it denotes a misrepresentation of the European model as well as the guiding function that a specialized constitutional jurisdiction normally plays in the enforcement of fundamental rights&#46; The exclusion of unconstitutional statutes related to tax law from this general invalidation possibility &#8212;established within the latest reforms to the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8212; just confirms this Mexican trend of exceptions&#46;</p><p id="par0200" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Aside from failing to decentralize the judicial system&#44; the highly-praised integration of diffused constitutional review into the Mexican system resulted in a confusing arrangement that threatens legal predictability and the foundation of Rule-of-law&#46; While this measure brings even more exceptions into a scheme that already lacked constitutional review consistency rules&#44; the dominating nature of the current Amparo rules render this so-called empowerment of lower courts merely an illusion and useless in reinforcing constitutional law&#46; No matter how pointless one might have considered the traditional exclusion of Mexican lower courts from constitutional review&#44; it was highly questionable for a constitutional court to have declared <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">on its own initiative</span> the model of constitutional scrutiny that a country should follow&#46; Even if one accepts that the Supreme Court could have such ability outside of a strictly adjudication procedure &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46;&#44; outside of a legal controversy&#41;&#44; neither the longed-for &#8220;Constitutional Reform on Human Rights&#8221; nor the arguments of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span> supports the diffused model conclusion&#46; Contrary to what is sustained by the Supreme Court&#8217;s majority in the resolution on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010</span>&#44; the constitutional reform &#8212;for better or for worse&#8212; actually reinforced the Mexican system&#8217;s reliance on specialized constitutional mechanisms&#46; Similarly&#44; it is highly debatable that the international judgment could generate specific obligations outside of its operative paragraphs and&#44; furthermore&#44; that the actions to undertake should be responsibility of the Supreme Court&#46; Even supposing this could be the case&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Radilla</span> did not consider the Mexican system of constitutional review&#8212; <a name="p44"></a>concentrated through specialized mechanisms before the federal judiciary&#8212; per se as a violation to any of the applicable conventions&#46; On the other hand&#44; the &#8220;judicial&#8221; incorporation of diffused review opened the gate for any ordinary court &#8212;federal or state&#44; judge-panel or unitary&#8212; to invalidate unconstitutional statutes&#46; The existing rules of constitutional scrutiny&#44; however&#44; did not give the possibility of such interpretation to spread to the rest of the legal system&#46; The rules do not provide for &#8220;correct&#8221; constitutional interpretation decided by lower courts to become binding precedent directly&#46; Neither they provide for &#8220;incorrect&#8221; constitutional interpretation to be overturned by the constitutional jurisdiction&#41;&#46; While this situation might be partially corrected if the bill recently presented by senators in October 2011 is finally approved&#44; this will happen only at the expense of even greater dependence on the federal judiciary&#46; The system&#44; however&#44; will still be an overly complex arrangement where constitutional interpretation can hardly impact the legal order as a whole&#46; For this reason&#44; Mexico will still have a system of constitutional review that fosters unequal treatment under the same Constitution&#46;</p><p id="par0205" class="elsevierStylePara elsevierViewall">Finally&#44; fundamental rights are an essential element of the Rule-of-law insofar they allow predictability within the legal realm&#46; A legal system whose procedural rules cannot provide individuals with the certainty that the State will enforce his or her constitutional prerogatives cannot expect the law to successfully guide conduct&#46; For this reason the enforcement of fundamental rights must be guaranteed in spite of a careless legislative&#44; a negligent administration&#44; an arbitrary trial judge&#44; or a combination of all of the above&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1065"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">213</span></a> Although a coherent system of constitutional review cannot guarantee that the law will be able to guide people&#8217;s conduct&#44; an incoherent one certainly guarantees that it will not&#46; A mix of constitutional review procedures based on elements from different legal traditions is not necessarily wrong &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">e&#46;g</span>&#46;&#44; the continental European model has more American influence than usually acknowledged&#41;&#46;<a class="elsevierStyleCrossRef" href="#fn1070"><span class="elsevierStyleSup">214</span></a> What is clearly flawed is the belief that constitutional rules in favor of individuals should serve different purposes in different traditions&#46; In other words&#44; it is a mistake to act as if the fundamental rights conferred by a Constitution were for just a few and not universal&#46; If a constitutional rule in benefit of an individual cannot be judicially enforced&#44; then it should not be called a &#8220;right&#8221;&#46; Similarly&#44; if this &#8220;right&#8221; is not applicable for everyone&#44; then it should not be called &#8220;fundamental&#8221;&#46; At a time in which Mexican legal institutions are being severely challenged by organized crime and when the capacity of the Mexican State to enforce fundamental rights &#8212;both of victims and perpetrators&#8212; has been questioned&#44; the call for a coherent system of constitutional review is more necessary than ever&#46;</p></span></span>"
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          "titulo" => "Resumen"
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          "titulo" => "Introduction"
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        5 => array:2 [
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          "titulo" => "Models of Constitutional Review and Fundamental Rights"
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          "titulo" => "The Mexican System between Two Models &#40;1847-2011&#41;"
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              "titulo" => "American Influence on Mexican Judicial Review &#40;1847-1987&#41;"
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              "titulo" => "A &#8220;Turn&#8221; towards Continental Europe &#40;1987-2011&#41;"
            ]
          ]
        ]
        7 => array:3 [
          "identificador" => "sec0030"
          "titulo" => "The Varios File 912&#47;2010 and the Incorporation of Diffused Constitutional Review in Mexico"
          "secciones" => array:2 [
            0 => array:2 [
              "identificador" => "sec0035"
              "titulo" => "The &#8220;Judicial&#8221; Incorporation of Diffused Review"
            ]
            1 => array:2 [
              "identificador" => "sec0040"
              "titulo" => "The Nuevo Le&#243;n Judgment and the Bill on Diffused Control"
            ]
          ]
        ]
        8 => array:2 [
          "identificador" => "sec0045"
          "titulo" => "Conclusions"
        ]
      ]
    ]
    "pdfFichero" => "main.pdf"
    "tienePdf" => true
    "fechaRecibido" => "2012-06-01"
    "fechaAceptado" => "2012-10-20"
    "PalabrasClave" => array:2 [
      "en" => array:1 [
        0 => array:4 [
          "clase" => "keyword"
          "titulo" => "Key Words"
          "identificador" => "xpalclavsec622024"
          "palabras" => array:4 [
            0 => "Constitutional review"
            1 => "fundamental rights"
            2 => "Mexico"
            3 => "lower courts"
          ]
        ]
      ]
      "es" => array:1 [
        0 => array:4 [
          "clase" => "keyword"
          "titulo" => "Palabras clave"
          "identificador" => "xpalclavsec622025"
          "palabras" => array:4 [
            0 => "Control constitucional"
            1 => "M&#233;xico"
            2 => "derechos fundamentales"
            3 => "tribunales ordinarios"
          ]
        ]
      ]
    ]
    "tieneResumen" => true
    "resumen" => array:2 [
      "en" => array:2 [
        "titulo" => "Abstract"
        "resumen" => "<span id="abst0005" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><p id="spar0005" class="elsevierStyleSimplePara elsevierViewall"><a name="p3"></a>This article reviews the evolution of constitutional judicial review in Mexico&#46; It claims that while the Mexican legal system has fluctuated between two fairly consolidated constitutional review models &#8212;the American and the continental European&#8212; it has so far disregarded at least one major factor strongly embedded within the rules of both&#46; Stated differently&#44; most constitutional scrutiny regarding fundamental rights &#8212;the essential prerogatives and freedoms to which every person as such is entitled under the constitution&#8212; should be fulfilled by lower courts empowered for such purpose within ordinary adjudication procedures&#46; For this reason&#44; constitutional jurisdiction should play only a guiding role &#8212;even when solving a specific controversy on its merits&#8212; in the enforcement of these rights&#46; While the rules of these two models leave the vast majority of legal controversies regarding fundamental rights outside constitutional jurisdiction&#44; they guarantee that the interpretation of the few leading cases that are formally reviewed impact the rest of the legal system&#46; Instead&#44; the Mexican rules of constitutional scrutiny have fostered excessive dependence on specialized constitutional courts&#46; Simultaneously&#44; they have weakened &#8212; through artificial differentiations regarding the review of statutes&#8212; the guiding role of constitutional interpretation in the legal realm&#46; This results in a complex system that is neither effective in making constitutional rules guide conduct nor in wholly enforcing fundamental rights&#46;</p></span>"
      ]
      "es" => array:2 [
        "titulo" => "Resumen"
        "resumen" => "<span id="abst0010" class="elsevierStyleSection elsevierViewall"><p id="spar0010" class="elsevierStyleSimplePara elsevierViewall">Este art&#237;culo analiza cr&#237;ticamente la evoluci&#243;n del control constitucional en M&#233;xico&#46; Argumenta que mientras el sistema mexicano ha fluctuado entre dos modelos bastante consolidados de justicia constitucional &#8212;el americano y el europeo continental&#8212;&#44; en M&#233;xico se ha descuidado por lo menos una premisa fundamental que se encuentra fuertemente arraigada en las reglas de ambos modelos&#46; A saber&#44; que la gran parte del control constitucional relacionada <a name="p4"></a>con la protecci&#243;n de derechos fundamentales debe ser tarea de los tribunales ordinarios &#8212;facultados para tal efecto dentro de los procedimientos jurisdiccionales ordinarios&#8212; y&#44; por lo tanto&#44; que la jurisdicci&#243;n constitucional debe jugar s&#243;lo un papel de gu&#237;a &#8212;aun cuando resuelva casos concretos&#8212; en la tutela de los derechos fundamentales&#46; As&#237;&#44; mientras las reglas de dichos modelos dejan formalmente fuera de la jurisdicci&#243;n constitucional la gran mayor&#237;a de los asuntos relacionados con derechos fundamentales&#44; aqu&#233;llas garantizan que la interpretaci&#243;n constitucional &#8212;surgida de los pocos casos trascendentales que logran llegar a la jurisdicci&#243;n constitucional&#8212; siempre adquiera generalidad en el orden jur&#237;dico&#46; Por el contrario&#44; las reglas mexicanas han fomentado una excesiva dependencia en la jurisdicci&#243;n constitucional especializada y&#44; simult&#225;neamente&#44; han debilitado&#44; a trav&#233;s de distinciones artificiales&#44; la funci&#243;n de gu&#237;a en el orden jur&#237;dico de la interpretaci&#243;n constitucional&#46; Esta situaci&#243;n resulta en un complicado sistema que no es efectivo en lograr que las reglas constitucionales gu&#237;en la conducta ni tampoco en tutelar satisfactoriamente los derechos fundamentales&#46;</p></span>"
      ]
    ]
    "NotaPie" => array:215 [
      0 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "&#42;"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar8010">The author received his B&#46;A&#46; in Law from the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Instituto Tecnol&#243;gico Aut&#243;nomo de M&#233;xico</span> &#40;ITAM&#41; and MPP from the Hertie School of Governance in Germany&#46; He has worked for the Mexican Federal High Court of Elections&#44; the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights&#44; and is currently a PhD candidate in Public Law at the Humboldt University of Berlin&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn8005"
      ]
      1 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "1"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0005">&#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010</span> y votos particulares formulados por los ministros Margarita Beatriz Luna Ramos&#44; Sergio Salvador Aguirre Anguiano y Luis Mar&#237;a Aguilar Morales&#59; as&#237; como votos particulares y concurrentes de los ministros Arturo Zald&#237;var Lelo de Larrea y Jorge Mario Pardo Rebolledo&#8221; &#91;Miscellaneous File 912&#47;2010&#93;&#44; Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Naci&#243;n &#91;S&#46;C&#46;J&#46;N&#46;&#93; &#91;Supreme Court&#93;&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 4 de octubre de 2011&#44; Segunda Secci&#243;n&#44; p&#46; 75 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41; &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0005"
      ]
      2 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "2"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0010">Decentralized constitutional review refers to those systems &#8212;based on the American model of constitutional scrutiny&#8212; where the powers to control the constitutionality of statutes is given to every court in the legal system and not only &#8212;as it occurs in systems based on the continental European model&#8212; to a specialised constitutional court&#46; For a short comparison in English between both models see Alec Stone Sweet&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Constitutions and Judicial Power</span>&#44; in COMPARATIVE POLITICS 218-39 &#40;Dani&#232;le Caramani ed&#46;&#44; Oxford University Press&#44; 2008&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0010"
      ]
      3 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "3"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0015">While colloquially these amendments have been handled jointly as the &#8220;Constitutional Reform on Human Rights&#44;&#8221; technically they were approved and published separately&#46; The division was based on whether the articles subject to reform concerned procedural or substantive law&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span>&#44; respectively&#44; &#8220;Decreto por el que se reforman&#44; adicionan y derogan diversas disposiciones de los art&#237;culos 94&#44; 103&#44; 104 y 107 de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Decree to amend&#44; add and derogate several provisions from articles 94&#44; 103&#44; 104&#44; and 107 of the Mexican Constitution&#93; &#91;hereinafter <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Reforma constitucional en Amparo 2011</span>&#93;&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 6 de junio de 2011&#44; Primera Secci&#243;n&#44; pp&#46; 2-6 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">and</span> &#8220;Decreto por el que se modifica la denominaci&#243;n del cap&#237;tulo i del t&#237;tulo primero y reforma diver-sos art&#237;culos de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Decree to modify the name of First Title&#8217;s Chapter I and amend several articles of the Mexican Constitution&#93; &#91;hereinafter <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Reforma constitucional en Derechos Humanos</span>&#93;&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 10 de junio de 2011&#44; pp&#46; 2-5 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0015"
      ]
      4 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "4"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0020">Radilla-Pacheco v&#46; Mexico&#44; Inter-Am&#46; Ct&#46; H&#46;R&#46; &#40;ser&#46; C&#41; N&#176; 209&#44; Nov&#46; 23&#44; 2009&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0020"
      ]
      5 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "5"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0025">The term &#8220;unconventional&#8221; refers to those acts that are in violation of international conventions or treaties&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0025"
      ]
      6 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "6"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0030">For a few dissenting voices against these developments see Jos&#233; Rold&#225;n Xopa&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Conjeturas sobre la reforma constitucional III</span>&#44; S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">apere</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ude</span> &#40;August 24&#44; 2011&#41; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">available at</span><a class="elsevierStyleInterRef" id="intr0005" href="http://joseroldanxopa.wordpress.com/2011/08/24/conjeturas-sobre-la-reforma-constitucional-iii/">http&#58;&#47;&#47;joseroldanxopa&#46;wordpress&#46;com&#47;2011&#47;08&#47;24&#47;conjeturas-sobre-la-reforma-constitucional-iii&#47;</a> &#40;last visited May 31&#44; 2012&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0030"
      ]
      7 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "7"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0035">The writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> &#8212;as it will be further explained in some detail&#8212; is a constitutional mechanism developed in Mexico for the judicial enforcement of fundamental rights against acts of authority&#46; It falls exclusively in the jurisdiction of the Federal Judicial Power&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See infra</span> section III&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0035"
      ]
      8 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "8"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0040"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;</span>&#44; Jos&#233; Ram&#243;n Coss&#237;o&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">La descentralizaci&#243;n de la justicia</span>&#44; E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">l</span> U<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">niversal</span>&#44; October 18&#44; 2011&#44; at A18 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0040"
      ]
      9 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "9"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0045">&#8220;TOCA Penal Art&#237;culo 43&#47;11&#8221; &#91;Crim&#46; App&#46; 43&#47;11&#93;&#44; Cuarta Sala Penal Unitaria del Poder Judicial del Estado de Nuevo Le&#243;n &#91;4th Nuevo Le&#243;n St&#46; Crim&#46; Ct&#46; App&#46;&#93;&#44; August 8&#44; 2011 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0045"
      ]
      10 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "10"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0050">This is the term with which it is referred to the Mexican government&#8217;s policy against drug trafficking&#46; Since 2006 it has increased substantially the involvement of the military &#8212;army&#44; air force&#44; and navy&#8212; in the enforcement of drug laws&#46; For a brief overview in English see D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">avid</span> A&#46; S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">hirk</span>&#44; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">he</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">rug</span> W<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ar in</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">exico</span>&#58; C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onfronting a</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">hared</span> T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">hreat</span> &#40;New York&#44; Council on Foreign Relations&#44; 2011&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0050"
      ]
      11 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "11"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0055">C&#243;digo Penal para el Estado de Nuevo Le&#243;n &#91;Nuevo Le&#243;n St&#46; Crim&#46; Code&#93; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> January 1997&#44; Art&#46; 224&#44; V&#44; Peri&#243;dico Oficial del Estado de Nuevo Le&#243;n &#91;Nuevo Le&#243;n St&#46; Official Journal&#93;&#44; 26 de Marzo de 1990 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46; &#40;&#8220;Article 224&#46; The penalties in this chapter shall be imposed to public servants&#44; whether employees or auxiliary personnel&#44; of the administration and procurement of justice as well as of the administrative courts&#44; who carry out any of the following offences&#58; &#8230;V&#46; Not complying with an order issued and legally notified by his&#47;her superior official&#44; without a lawful reason to do so&#46;&#8221;&#41; &#40;Author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0055"
      ]
      12 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "12"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0060">There is no exact translation in English for the term &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">ley penal en blanco</span>&#8221;&#46; This concept is related to the criminal law principle <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">nullum crimen sine lege scripta</span> &#40;there shall be no felony without a written statute&#41; and refers&#44; in short&#44; to criminal statutes that delegate the power to define punishable offences to another entity&#46; Since the power to define crimes in modern democratic regimes is invested exclusively in the legislator&#44; such statutes are considered invalid&#46; For a succinct explanation in English see M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ichael</span> B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ohlander</span>&#44; P<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">rinciples of</span> G<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erman</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">riminal</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> 18-27 &#40;Oxford&#44; Hart Publishing&#44; 2008&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0060"
      ]
      13 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "13"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0065"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;TOCA Penal Art&#237;culo 43&#47;2011&#44;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 9&#44; at 22&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0065"
      ]
      14 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "14"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0070">The trial judge had authorized the detention of the defendants only on the basis of the crime contained in Article 192 of the state&#8217;s criminal code &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Crimes against official institutions and public servants</span>&#8221;&#41;&#46; Even though this part of the ruling was reversed on appeal &#40;which would have turned unnecessary a decision regarding any other offence&#41;&#44; the state prosecutor had lodged a joint appeal against the trial judge&#8217;s exclusion of Article 224&#44; V as basis for the detention&#46; Therefore&#44; the appellate judge was compelled to solve this issue as well&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id</span>&#46; at 29-30&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0070"
      ]
      15 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "15"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0075">Being a decision on appeal for a felony that lacks a victim as such&#44; it fitted into the few cases that could have not be reviewed by means of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0075"
      ]
      16 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "16"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0080">&#8220;Iniciativa que contiene proyecto de decreto por el que se expide la Ley Reglamentaria de los art&#237;culos 1&#176; y 133 de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Bill to Enact the Regulatory Law of Articles 1 and 133 of the Mexican Constitution&#93; &#91;hereinafter <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Iniciativa de Ley de Control Difuso</span>&#93;&#44; Gaceta del Senado &#91;Senate&#8217;s Gazette&#93;&#44; 3 de noviembre de 2011&#44; t&#46; I&#44; p&#46; 111 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41; &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0080"
      ]
      17 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "17"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0085">This means &#8212;in accordance with Article 2 of the proposal&#8212; every court that is not dealing with a writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id</span>&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0085"
      ]
      18 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "18"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0090">These courts belong to the Federal Judicial Power and are essentially responsible for solving the writs of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> filed against definitive judgments delivered by local judicial authorities&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See infra</span> section III&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0090"
      ]
      19 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "19"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0095"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Iniciativa de Ley de Control Difuso&#44; supra</span> note 16&#44; at 112 &#40;Article 6 of the bill&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0095"
      ]
      20 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "20"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0100">This manuscript was handed in on June 1st&#44; 2012&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0100"
      ]
      21 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "21"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0105"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Rold&#225;n Xopa&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 6&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0105"
      ]
      22 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "22"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0110"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Wolfgang Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Nachvollziehende Grundrechtskontrolle&#44;</span> 128 A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">rchiv</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">es</span> &#214;<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ffentlichen</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">echts</span> 173&#44; 189 &#40;2003&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0110"
      ]
      23 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "23"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0115"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onald</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">workin</span>&#44; A M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">atter of</span> P<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">rinciple</span> 27 &#40;Oxford&#44; Clarendon Press&#44; 1985&#41;&#46; Against this position see the classical essay of Joseph Raz&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">The Rule-of-law and its Virtue</span>&#44; in T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">he</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uthority of</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span>&#58; E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ssays on</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw and</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orality</span> 210-29 &#40;Oxford&#44; Clarendon Press&#44; 1979&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0115"
      ]
      24 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "24"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0120"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">on</span> F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uller</span>&#44; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">he</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orality of</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> 81-2 &#40;New Haven&#44; Yale University Press&#44; 1964&#41;&#59; Raz&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 23&#44; at 225-26 &#40;&#8220;It is of the essence of the law to guide behaviour through rules and courts in charge of their application&#46; Therefore&#44; the rule of law is the specific excellence of the law&#46; Since conformity to the rule of law is the virtue of law in itself&#44; law as law regardless of the purposes it serves&#44; it is understandable and right that the rule of law is thought of as among the few virtues of law which are the special responsibility of the courts and the legal profession&#46;&#8221;&#41; A classic critique to this position comes from the denial of a substantial difference between an administrative act and a judicial decision&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Hans Kelsen&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Wesen und Entwicklung der Staatsgerichtsbarkeit&#44;</span> 5 V<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">er&#246;ffentlichungen</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">er</span> V<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ereinigung</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">er</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eutschen</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">taatsrechtslehrer</span> 30&#44; 52 &#40;1929&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0120"
      ]
      25 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "25"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0125">Marbury v&#46; Madison&#44; 5 U&#46;S&#46; &#40;1 Cranch&#41; 137 &#40;1803&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0125"
      ]
      26 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "26"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0130"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Stone Sweet&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 2&#44; at 232&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0130"
      ]
      27 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "27"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0135">For a short yet insightful overview of these approaches see J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">os&#233;</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">am&#243;n</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">istemas y modelos de control constitucional en</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">&#233;xico</span> 129-32 &#40;Mexico&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 2011&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0135"
      ]
      28 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "28"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0140">While some authors &#40;mostly in Germany&#41; use the terminology &#8220;unity model&#8221; &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Einheitsmo-dell</span>&#41; in reference to the American and &#8220;separation model&#8221; &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Trennungsmodell</span>&#41; when referring to the European&#44; this semantic distinction just emphasizes whether the constitutional review is carried out by an organ within the ordinary judiciary or rather by a separated entity&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">laus</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chlaich</span> &#38; S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">tefan</span> K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orioth</span>&#44; D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">as</span> B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">undesverfassungsgericht</span> 2-3 &#40;M&#252;nchen&#44; Verlag C&#46;H&#46; Beck&#44; 10th ed&#46; 2010&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0140"
      ]
      29 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "29"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0145"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> Stone Sweet&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 2&#44; at 223&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0145"
      ]
      30 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "30"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0150">&#8220;Parliamentary Sovereignty&#8221; is a doctrine that recognizes Parliament&#8217;s right &#8220;to make or unmake any law whatever&#46;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">lbert</span> V<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">enn</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">icey</span>&#44; I<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ntroduction to the</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">tudy of the</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw of the</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onstitution</span> 3-4 &#40;Indianapolis&#44; Liberty&#47;Classics&#44; 8th ed&#46; &#91;1915&#93; 1982&#41;&#46; It also bans any other body to overrule such laws&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> &#40;&#8220;&#8230;no person or body is recognized by the law of England as having a right to override or set aside the legislation of Parliament&#8221;&#41;&#46; In continental Europe the supremacy of Parliament was associated to Rousseau&#8217;s notion of the &#8220;general will&#8221;&#46; This assumed that the power of the people as expressed through its representatives is supreme and thus not subject to any review&#46; See T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">om</span> G<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">insburg</span>&#44; J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">udicial</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eview in</span> N<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ew</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">emocracies</span> 1-2 &#40;Cambridge University Press&#44; 2005&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0150"
      ]
      31 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "31"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0155"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onald</span> K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ommers</span>&#44; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">he</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onstitutional</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">urisprudence of the</span> F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ederal</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">epublic of</span> G<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ermany</span> 4-7 &#40;Durham&#44; Duke University Press&#44; 2nd ed&#46; 1997&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0155"
      ]
      32 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "32"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0160">In the American model&#44; &#8220;abstract constitutional review&#8221; is excluded&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Stone Sweet&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 2&#44; at 222&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0160"
      ]
      33 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "33"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0165">To consider the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> effects unreservedly as a feature of US constitutional judgments &#8212;specially regarding decisions made by the US Supreme Court&#8212; is a bit to oversimplify&#46; Whereas a decision of the US Supreme Court declaring a statute unconstitutional does not remove it from the books&#44; it does prevent &#8212;as it will be explained below&#8212; the statute&#8217;s further enforcement&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> V<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">icki</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ackson</span> &#38; M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ark</span> T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ushnet</span>&#44; C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">omparative</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onstitutional</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> 458 &#40;New York&#44; Foundation Press&#44; 1999&#41;&#46; &#40;&#8220;&#8230;US decisions are frequently described as binding only upon the parties to the litigation&#46; This is far too simplistic and may not be accurate at all with constitutional adjudication in the US Supreme Court&#8230;&#8221;&#41;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0165"
      ]
      34 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "34"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0170">F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uller</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 24&#44; at 81&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0170"
      ]
      35 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "35"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0175"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> 28 U&#46;S&#46;C&#46; &#167; 1257 &#40;2006&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0175"
      ]
      36 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "36"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0180">This is the rule &#8212;developed in common law systems&#8212; which binds courts to the authority of superior courts&#46; It forces them to solve a case in the same way it has been previously decided by a higher authority in the judicial hierarchy&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ackson</span> &#38; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ushnet</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 33&#44; at 458&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0180"
      ]
      37 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "37"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0185">This is the so-called rejection monopoly &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Verwerfungsmonopol</span>&#41; proper of the continental European model&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chlaich</span> &#38; K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orioth</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 28&#44; at 99&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0185"
      ]
      38 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "38"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0190">In Germany&#44; however&#44; the Federal Constitutional Court &#40;BVerfG&#41; has developed ways to avoid declaring a statute unconstitutional and therefore to immediately expel it from the legal system&#46; The court has&#44; for instance&#44; declared a statute&#8217;s &#8220;incompatibility with the constitution&#8221; &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Unvereinbarerkl&#228;rung&#41;</span> and provided the legislator with a deadline to overcome the incompatible situation&#46; These cases have typically involved statutes that violated the equality clause by excluding a certain group from a legal benefit that was given to another&#46; See W<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erner</span> H<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eun</span>&#44; F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">unktionell</span>-R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">echtliche</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chranken</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">er</span> V<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erfassungsgerichtsbarkeit</span> 21-4 &#40;Nomos&#44; Baden-Baden&#44; 1992&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0190"
      ]
      39 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "39"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0195"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chlaich</span> &#38; K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orioth</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 28&#44; at 244-6&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0195"
      ]
      40 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "40"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0200"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;</span>&#44; the procedures of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Vorlageverfahren</span> in the Grundgesetz &#91;GG&#93; &#91;German Basic Law&#93;&#44; Art&#46; 100&#59; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">cuesti&#243;n de inconstitucionalidad</span> in the Constituci&#243;n Espa&#241;ola &#91;CE&#93; &#91;Spanish Constitution&#93;&#44; Art&#46; 163&#59; and&#44; recently introduced&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">question constitutionnelle</span> in the Constitution de la R&#233;publique fran&#231;aise &#91;Const&#46; Fr&#46;&#93; &#91;French Constitution&#93;&#44; Art&#46; 61-1&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0200"
      ]
      41 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "41"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0205"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Martin Shapiro&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Judicial Delegation Doctrines&#58; The US&#44; Britain&#44; and France</span>&#44; 25 W<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">est</span> E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uropean</span> P<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">olitics</span> 173&#44; 174-5 &#40;2002&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0205"
      ]
      42 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "42"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0210"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ommers</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 31&#44; at 42&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0210"
      ]
      43 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "43"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0215"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;</span>&#44; Gesetz &#252;ber das Bundesverfassungsgericht &#91;BVerfGG&#93; &#91;German Federal Constitutional Court Act&#93;&#44; &#167; 31&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0215"
      ]
      44 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "44"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0220"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ackson</span> &#38; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ushnet</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 33&#44; at 458&#46; &#40;&#8220;If all courts could decide constitutional questions without <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">stare decisis</span> effect&#44; Capelletti suggests&#44; a chaotic situation with respect to the validity of laws would result&#46;&#8221;&#41;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0220"
      ]
      45 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "45"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0225"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 132&#46; As it is shown in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">infra</span> section III&#44; the Mexican evolution of constitutional scrutiny suggests this misunderstanding&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0225"
      ]
      46 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "46"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0230"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chlaich</span> &#38; K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orioth</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 28&#44; at 99&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0230"
      ]
      47 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "47"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0235">It is often said that the &#8220;pure&#8221; continental European model excludes constitutional scrutiny of administrative and judicial action&#46; For this reason several scholars refer to centralized systems that allow this rather as &#8220;mixed&#8221; &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">e&#46;g</span>&#46; Germany&#44; Spain&#44; and Italy&#41;&#46; In fact&#44; however&#44; not even the first system to ever adopt the centralized model &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; Austria 1920-1934&#41; limited this constitutional review to acts of Parliament&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Kelsen&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 24&#44; at 58&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0235"
      ]
      48 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "48"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0240">RAZ&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 23&#44; at 213-4&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0240"
      ]
      49 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "49"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0245"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">workin</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 23&#44; at 27&#46; &#40;&#8220;For individuals have powers under the rights conception that they do not have under the rule book conception&#46; They have the power to demand&#44; as individuals&#44; a fresh adjudication of their rights&#46; If their rights are recognised by a court&#44; these rights will be enforced in spite of the fact that no parliament had the time or the will to enforce them&#46;&#8221;&#41;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0245"
      ]
      50 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "50"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0250"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Markus Kenntner&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Das BVerfG als subsidi&#228;rer Superrevisor&#63;</span>&#44; 58 N<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eue</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uristische</span> W<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ochenschrift</span> 785&#44; 786 &#40;2005&#41;&#59; Kelsen&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 24&#44; at 59&#46; Even though this statement sounds at first glance like a <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">de facto</span> argument&#44; in its essence it derives from the theoretical impossibility to institutionalize a further obligation in order to review all the acts of the constitutional reviewer&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 180-1&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0250"
      ]
      51 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "51"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0255"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;</span>&#44; H&#233;ctor Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Louis Favoreu&#44; Les Courts Constitutionnelles</span>&#44; 60 B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">olet&#237;n</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">exicano de</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erecho</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">omparado</span> 1005&#44; 1006 &#40;1987&#41;&#46; By &#8220;ordinary law&#8221; it is meant here every legal rule which is not part of the constitution or a product of constitutional interpretation&#46; This includes statutes &#40;federal or local&#41;&#44; regulations&#44; delegated legislation&#44; and even international covenants&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0255"
      ]
      52 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "52"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0260"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 181-2&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0260"
      ]
      53 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "53"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0265"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ommers</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 31&#44; at 51&#46; The &#8220;constitution&#8221; here includes the constitutional interpretation that the constitutional court has established in its judgments&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0265"
      ]
      54 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "54"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0270">Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 188 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0270"
      ]
      55 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "55"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0275">A fairly good example of this &#8216;direct effect&#8217; of the constitution is the collision of fundamental rights carried out by ordinary courts in Germany&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span></p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0275"
      ]
      56 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "56"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0280">The problem of delimitation of duties in regards to administrative action whose statutory grounds are not contested is said to be solved by the usual requirement &#8220;to exhaust all legal remedies&#46;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oland</span> F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">leury</span>&#44; V<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erfassungsprozessrecht</span> 64 &#40;K&#246;ln-M&#44; Carl Haymanns Verlag&#44; 7th ed&#46; 2007&#41;&#46; However&#44; this does not really solve the problem of distribution of tasks between ordinary administrative courts and the constitutional court&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Kelsen&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 24&#44; at 67&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0280"
      ]
      57 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "57"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0285"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Alfonso Herrera Garc&#237;a&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">El recurso de amparo en el modelo kelseniano de control constitucional &#191;un elemento at&#237;pico&#63;</span>&#44; in 1 E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">l juicio de amparo</span>&#46; A 160 <span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">a&#241;os de la primera sentencia</span> 601 &#40;Manuel Gonz&#225;lez Oropeza &#38; Eduardo Ferrer-MacGregor eds&#46;&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 2011&#41;&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;</span>&#44; the German <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Verfassungsbeschwerde</span> and the Spanish <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">recurso de amparo</span>&#46; While they can be compared to some extent with the American writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">habeas corpus</span>&#44; these are general mechanisms of constitutional protection which are not limited to basic rights in the criminal procedure&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0285"
      ]
      58 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "58"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0290">Kenntner&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 50&#44; at 786 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0290"
      ]
      59 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "59"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0295">For a critique to the formulas used so far by the German BVerfG see Wolfgang Roth&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Die &#220;berpr&#252;fung fachgerichtlicher Urteile durch das Bundesverfassungsgericht und die Entscheidung &#252;ber die Annahme einer Verfassungsbeschwerde</span>&#44; 121 A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">rchiv</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">es</span> &#214;<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ffentlichen</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">echts</span> 544&#44; 548-52 &#40;1996&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0295"
      ]
      60 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "60"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0300"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 178&#59; H<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eun</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 38&#44; at 12-6&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0300"
      ]
      61 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "61"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0305"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 176&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0305"
      ]
      62 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "62"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0310"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 179&#59; J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ackson</span> &#38; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ushnet</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 33&#44; at 458&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0310"
      ]
      63 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "63"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0315"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Kenntner&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 50&#44; at 786&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0315"
      ]
      64 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "64"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0320"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chlaich</span> &#38; K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orioth</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 28&#44; at 128-9&#59; K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ommers</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 31&#44; at 51-2&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;</span>&#44; Gesetz &#252;ber das Bundesverfassungsgericht &#91;BVerfGG&#93; &#91;German Federal Constitutional Court Act&#93;&#44; &#167;93 &#40;d&#41;&#44; cl&#46; 1&#59; Rules of the Supreme Court of the United States&#44; pt&#46; III&#44; rule 10&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0320"
      ]
      65 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "65"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0325"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 187&#59; 28 U&#46;S&#46;C&#46; &#167; 2254 &#40;d&#41; &#40;2006&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0325"
      ]
      66 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "66"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0330">Before 1847 constitutional review was carried out mostly by political organs&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 42&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0330"
      ]
      67 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "67"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0335"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> Mariano Azuela G&#252;itr&#243;n&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">La Suprema Corte de Justicia de M&#233;xico&#44; genuino tribunal constitucional</span>&#44; 2 A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">nuario de</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erecho</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onstitucional</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">atinoamericano</span> 39&#44; 39-40 &#40;2002&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0335"
      ]
      68 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "68"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0340"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">milio</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">abasa</span>&#44; H<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">istoria de las</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onstituciones</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">exicanas</span> 25 &#40;Mexico&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 2nd ed&#46; 2000&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0340"
      ]
      69 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "69"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0345">In contrast&#44; in continental European systems that embrace judicial federalism&#44; the bulk of both federal and state controversies are usually solved &#8212;in trial and appeal&#8212; within the state judicial subsystem&#46; Consequently&#44; in continental Europe the federal courts usually do not have &#8220;original jurisdiction&#8221; and are rather courts of final appeal&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> KOMMERS&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 31&#44; at 3&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0345"
      ]
      70 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "70"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0350"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">abasa</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 68&#44; at 25&#46; The ephemeral yet important constitutional reforms made in 1847 &#8212;which introduced judicial review into the Mexican system to coexist with the political mechanisms of constitutional scrutiny that were valid at that time&#8212; did not alter the judicial structure adopted by the Constitution of 1824&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id</span>&#46; at 56-8&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0350"
      ]
      71 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "71"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0355">There was a theoretical possibility for the Supreme Court to carry out constitutional scrutiny outside <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> by solving the controversies between states or between the Union and the states&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Mex&#46; C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onst</span>&#46; art&#46; 98 &#40;enacted 1857&#44; repealed 1917&#41;&#46; However&#44; this mechanism did not play any significant role in the Mexican system of the time&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 41&#46;The federal courts that traditionally have enjoyed constitutional review powers in Mexico &#8212;as they have had either original or appellate jurisdiction on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8212; are the District Courts&#44; the Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts&#44; and the Supreme Court&#46; Other courts within the Federal Judicial Power &#8212;such as Unitary Circuit Courts or the Federal Electoral Court&#8212; and courts of federal jurisdiction which organically belong to the Executive Power &#8212;such as the Federal Administrative Court or the Federal Labour Court&#8212; did not enjoy until recently&#44; given the kind of procedures that they usually solve&#44; powers of constitutional scrutiny&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0355"
      ]
      72 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "72"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0360">Mexico is&#44; after all&#44; a country of the civil law tradition&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 26&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0360"
      ]
      73 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "73"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0365"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id</span>&#46; at 30-1&#46; Nonetheless&#44; the great mistrust in the authorities of the states was certainly also decisive for such a choice&#46; While in one of the drafts of this constitutional text the jurisdiction on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> was actually conferred not only to courts within the federal judiciary but also to those of the states&#44; the final text banned the local judiciaries from performing any kind of constitutional control&#46; In my opinion&#44; such a proposal to include state judiciaries on these tasks was not as absurd as it has been often described by Mexican legal scholarship&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Contra&#44; e&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">abasa</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 68&#44; at 77&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0365"
      ]
      74 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "74"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0370"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Jes&#250;s &#193;ngel Arroyo Moreno&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">El origen del juicio de amparo</span>&#44; in L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">a g&#233;nesis de los derechos humanos en</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">&#233;xico</span> 43&#44; 55-9 &#40;Margarita Moreno-Bonett &#38; Mar&#237;a Gonz&#225;lez eds&#46;&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 2006&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0370"
      ]
      75 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "75"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0375"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> H&#233;ctor Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">A Brief Introduction to the Mexican Writ of Amparo</span>&#44; 9 C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">alifornia</span> W<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">estern</span> I<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">nternational</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ournal</span> 306&#44; &#40;1979&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0375"
      ]
      76 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "76"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0380"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Stephen I&#46; Vladeck&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">The New Habeas Revisionism</span>&#44; 124 H<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">arvard</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eview</span> 941 &#40;2011&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0380"
      ]
      77 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "77"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0385"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Dallin H&#46; Oaks&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Habeas Corpus in the States 1776-1865</span>&#44; 32 U<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">niversity of</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">hicago</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eview</span> 243&#44; 248-9 &#40;1965&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0385"
      ]
      78 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "78"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0390">Vladeck&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 76&#44; at 980&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0390"
      ]
      79 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "79"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0395"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Ex parte Bollman</span>&#44; 8 U&#46;S&#46; &#40;4 Cranch&#41; 75 &#40;1807&#41;&#59; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Ex parte Watkins</span>&#44; 28 U&#46;S&#46; &#40;3 Pet&#46;&#41; 193 &#40;1830&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0395"
      ]
      80 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "80"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0400"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">lexis de</span> T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ocqueville</span>&#44; D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">emocracy in</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">merica</span> 92 &#40;George Lawrence trans&#46;&#44; Harper &#38; Row Publishers&#44; 1966&#41; &#40;&#8220;If the &#91;American&#93; judges had been able to attack laws in a general and theoretical way&#44; if they could have taken the initiative and censored legislation&#44; they would have played a prominent part on the political scene&#59; a judge who had become the champion or the adversary of a party would have stirred all the passions dividing the country to take part in the struggle&#46; But when a judge attacks a law in the course of an obscure argument in a particular case&#44; he partly hides the importance of his attack from the public observation&#46; His decision is just intended to affect some private interest&#59; only by chance does the law find itself harmed&#46; Moreover&#44; the law thus censured is not abolished&#59; its moral force is diminished&#44; but its physical effect is not suspended&#46; It is only gradually&#44; under repeated judicial blows&#44; that it finally succumbs&#46;&#8221;&#41;&#46; His work was frequently cited in the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> debates&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Arroyo&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 74&#44; at 57&#46; As mentioned already&#44; the inter partes rule does not apply to the decisions of the US Supreme Court&#46; See J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ackson</span> &#38; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ushnet</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 33&#44; at 458&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0400"
      ]
      81 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "81"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0405">He introduced <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> at the state level within his proposal for the Constitution of Yucat&#225;n in 1840&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Jos&#233; Enrique Capetillo Trejo&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">La Constituci&#243;n yucateca de 1841 y la reforma constitucional en las entidades federativas&#44;</span> in D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erecho constitucional estatal</span> 473&#44; 478-81 &#40;Francisco de Andrea ed&#46;&#44; Mexico&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 2001&#41;&#46; While Rej&#243;n also participated in the debates that gave way to the federal constitutional reforms of 1847 and there he explicitly suggested local court involvement in constitutional scrutiny&#44; he abandoned the discussions abruptly and his ideas where only partially adopted&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span></p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0405"
      ]
      82 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "82"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0410">He is considered the main developer of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> at the national level&#46; As part of the group in charge of the federal constitutional amendments of 1847&#44; he presented a famous dissenting opinion against the majority&#8217;s conclusions&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Mariano Otero&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Voto Particular</span>&#44; in S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uprema</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orte de</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">usticia de la</span> N<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aci&#243;n</span> &#91;S&#46;C&#46;J&#46;N&#46;&#93; &#91;Supreme Court&#93;&#44; L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">a</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uprema</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orte de</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">usticia</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">sus leyes y sus hombres</span> 127 &#40;Mexico&#44; 1985&#41;&#46; His arguments caused the majority to reconsider and Otero&#8217;s proposals &#8212;including a combined system of constitutional scrutiny to be carried out both by judicial and political organs&#8212; were approved almost word for word as constitutional amendments&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">abasa</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 68&#44; at 56&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0410"
      ]
      83 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "83"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0415"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> Arroyo&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 74&#44; at 57-9&#46; This is also the reason why the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> effects of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> judgments are commonly &#8212;yet misleadingly&#8212; called the &#8220;Otero formula&#46;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 31-2&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0415"
      ]
      84 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "84"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0420">Otero&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 82&#44; at 137 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0420"
      ]
      85 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "85"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0425">At the time the Mexican <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> was created the federal writ of habeas corpus in the United States was not effective to review convictions&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Rex Collings Jr&#46;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Habeas Corpus for Convicts</span>&#44; 40 C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">alifornia</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eview</span> 335&#44; 351 &#40;1952&#41;&#46; Whereas in 1867 &#8212;after the American Civil War&#8212; the federal writ was extended by Congress to those <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">detainees</span> held in custody by the states&#44; as of the 1940s the so-called &#8220;Warren Court&#8221; broadened the scope of federal habeas corpus also to <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">convicts</span> under state law&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span>&#44; among many&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Waley v&#46; Johnston</span>&#44; 316 U&#46;S&#46; 101 &#40;1942&#41;&#59; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Brown v&#46; Allen</span>&#44; 344 US 443 &#40;1953&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0425"
      ]
      86 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "86"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0430"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Oaks&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 77&#44; at 246&#46; As a matter of fact state courts issued habeas corpus writs against federal jailers on a regular basis until this was banned by the Supreme Court in 1859&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Vladeck&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 76&#44; at 981-2&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0430"
      ]
      87 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "87"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0435">The monopoly of the federal judiciary on <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> jurisdiction can be traced back to Otero&#8217;s proposal from 1847&#58; &#8220;I still have not found a solid reason against this way of putting the rights of man under the aegis of the general power&#44; but those &#91;reasons&#93; which have made me decide in favour of it are not few&#8230; because of this I have not vacillated in proposing Congress to elevate greatly the Federal Judicial Power&#44; giving it the right to protect all the inhabitants of the Republic in the enjoyment of the rights assured to them by the Constitution and the Constitutional Laws&#44; against every attack of the executive or the legislative&#44; whether from the states or from the Union&#46;&#8221; Otero&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 82&#44; at 131-7 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46; His ideas in this regard &#8212;unlike those concerning constitutional review by political organs&#8212; were retaken by those who enacted the Mexican Constitution of 1857&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">abasa</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 68&#44; at 77&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0435"
      ]
      88 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "88"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0440">There were in fact several interesting proposals at the time that would have granted state courts some jurisdiction on the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44; compare</span> Arroyo&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 74&#44; at 59&#59; Ponciano Arriaga &#38; others&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Proyecto de Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de la Rep&#250;blica Mexicana &#40;16 de Junio de 1856&#41;</span>&#44; in S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">uprema</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orte de</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">usticia de la</span> N<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aci&#243;n</span> &#91;S&#46;C&#46;J&#46;N&#46;&#93; &#91;Supreme Court&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 82&#44; at 165-6 <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">with</span> Mex&#46; C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onst</span>&#46; art&#46; 101 &#40;enacted 1857&#44; repealed 1917&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0440"
      ]
      89 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "89"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0445"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See supra</span> section II&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ackson</span> &#38; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ushnet</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 33&#44; at 458&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0445"
      ]
      90 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "90"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0450">Two of these mechanisms were contained in Otero&#8217;s proposal from 1847&#46; They included &#8212;parallel to judicial review through <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8212; the constitutional review of state legislation by the federal Congress and&#44; conversely&#44; of federal statutes by state legislatures&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Otero&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 82&#44; at 140&#46; While these mechanisms coexisted with judicial review for a few years&#44; the Constitution of 1857 completely eliminated them from the Mexican system&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 31-2&#59; R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">abasa</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 68&#44; at 77&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0450"
      ]
      91 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "91"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0455"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 42&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0455"
      ]
      92 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "92"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0460">This is most probably where the veneration to the &#8220;originality&#8221; of the Mexican writ comes from&#46; Some of the better known principles ruling the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> procedure include the following&#58; relativity of judgments &#40;i&#46;e&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">inter partes</span> or <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">relatividad</span>&#41;&#59; standing to the offended party only &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">parte agraviada</span>&#41;&#59; decisions based exclusively on the complaint &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">estricto derecho</span>&#41;&#59; exhaustion of ordinary legal remedies &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">definitividad</span>&#41;&#44; and statutory continuation &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">prosecuci&#243;n</span>&#41;&#46; The literature concerning this writ is abundant&#44; quite technical&#44; and frequently specialized into the particularities that have developed within each sub-subject of the constitutional mechanism&#46; For a succinct account of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> in English see Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 75&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0460"
      ]
      93 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "93"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0465">During the validity of the Constitution of 1857 &#8212;which despite several interruptions due to foreign invasions lasted until the outburst of the Mexican Revolution in 1910&#8212; statutes regulating <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> were enacted in 1861&#44; 1869&#44; 1882&#44; 1897&#44; and 1908&#46; Most of the rules developed during this period outlived the Constitution and are still valid today&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 34-7&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0465"
      ]
      94 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "94"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0470">Martin v&#46; Hunter&#8217;s Lessee&#44; 14 U&#46;S&#46; 304 &#40;1816&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0470"
      ]
      95 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "95"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0475"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">os&#233;</span> B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">arrag&#225;n</span>&#44; P<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">roceso de discusi&#243;n de la</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ey de</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">mparo de</span> 1869&#44; 189-90 &#40;Mexico&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 1987&#41;&#46; It is very unlikely those who rooted for the American model in the Mexican Congress of 1869 &#8212;Mariscal and Velasco&#8212; were aware of their American counterpart granting the federal courts habeas corpus jurisdiction over state prisoners&#8217; claims just two years before through the Habeas Corpus Act of 1867&#46; Still&#44; this authority was exercised in the United States only for &#8220;jurisdictional challenges&#8221; until the 1940s&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Vladeck&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 76&#44; at 946&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0475"
      ]
      96 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "96"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0480">Even though in January 1869 &#8212;after a long and heated debate&#8212; legislation had explicitly made the writ inadmissible to challenge acts of the judiciary&#44; in July of that same year the Supreme Court admitted and granted in a controversial ruling &#8212;without even invalidating the respective statute&#8212; the first <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> against a judgment of the Superior Court of Sinaloa&#46; This view finally prevailed and the &#8220;judicial <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8221; was allowed explicitly in the statute of 1882&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Manuel Gonz&#225;lez Oropeza&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Protection in Judicial Business&#58; The Case of Miguel Vega</span>&#44; 3 M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">exican</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eview</span> &#40;2005&#41;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">available at</span><a class="elsevierStyleInterRef" id="intr0010" href="http://info8.juridicas.unam.mx/cont/mlawr/3/arc/arc6.htm">http&#58;&#47;&#47;info8&#46;juridicas&#46;unam&#46;mx&#47;cont&#47;mlawr&#47;3&#47;arc&#47;arc6&#46;htm</a> &#40;last visited May 31&#44; 2012&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0480"
      ]
      97 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "97"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0485"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Otero&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 82&#44; at 137&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0485"
      ]
      98 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "98"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0490"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Ley de Amparo &#91;L&#46;A&#46;&#93; &#91;Amparo Law&#93;&#44; as amended&#44; art&#46; 8&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 14 de Diciembre de 1882 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0490"
      ]
      99 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "99"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0495">An exception was introduced in 1882 to allow for state courts to issue some provisional injunctions in <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> when there was no federal court in the district where the violation had taken place&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> art&#46; 4&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0495"
      ]
      100 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "100"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0500"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Jos&#233; Luis Soberanes&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Surgimiento del Amparo Judicial</span>&#44; in 2 E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">l juicio de amparo</span>&#46; A 160 <span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">a&#241;os de la primera sentencia</span> 465&#44; 475-9 &#40;Manuel Gonz&#225;lez Oropeza &#38; Eduardo Ferrer-MacGregor eds&#46;&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 2011&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0500"
      ]
      101 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "101"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0505"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Jos&#233; Mar&#237;a Serna&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">The Concept of Jurisprudencia in Mexican Law</span>&#44; 2 M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">exican</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eview</span> 131&#44; 132-3 &#40;2009&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0505"
      ]
      102 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "102"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0510"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 133&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0510"
      ]
      103 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "103"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0515">Even though the Mexican Senate was reinstated in 1872 and this organ was granted some sort of constitutional control&#44; by that time <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> had already consolidated as the only mechanism of review and this new possibility had in fact very few practical applications&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 51-3&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0515"
      ]
      104 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "104"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0520">Within the 70 years that followed its enactment&#44; Article 107 of the Mexican Constitution &#8212;the article regulating the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#8212; was amended in 1951&#44; 1962&#44; 1967&#44; 1974 &#40;twice&#41;&#44; 1975&#44; 1979&#44; 1986 and 1987&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 87&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0520"
      ]
      105 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "105"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0525"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 86-8&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0525"
      ]
      106 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "106"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0530">After the incorporation of the so-called social rights to the Mexican Constitution of 1917&#44; the Supreme Court had jurisdiction through <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> practically against any act of any authority in the system&#46; While on the one hand it had original jurisdiction on the one-instance writ &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo directo</span>&#41; against ordinary civil and criminal judgments&#44; on the other hand it enjoyed appellate jurisdiction on the two-instance writ &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo indirecto</span>&#41; that was filed against legislative and&#47;or administrative acts &#8212;including the quasi-judicial decisions of administrative and labor courts&#8212; before the federal District Courts&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> H&#233;ctor Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Ochenta a&#241;os de evoluci&#243;n constitucional del juicio de amparo mexicano</span>&#44; in O<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chenta a&#241;os de vida constitucional en</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">&#233;xico</span> 371&#44; 376 &#40;Jaime Garc&#237;a ed&#46;&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 1998&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0530"
      ]
      107 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "107"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0535"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 386&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0535"
      ]
      108 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "108"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0540">After a series of intricate formulas that initially distributed <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> jurisdiction between the Supreme Court and the Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts depending on whether the alleged violations were&#44; respectively&#44; substantive or procedural&#44; in 1968 the basic criterion of distribution surrounded the economic or social relevance of the specific <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> October 25&#44; 1967&#44; art&#46; 107&#44; V-IX&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46; Additionally&#44; the administrative chamber of the Supreme Court could take over cases discretionally&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Ley de Amparo &#91;L&#46;A&#46;&#93; &#91;Amparo Law&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended&#44;</span> art&#46; 84&#44; I &#40;e&#41;&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 30 de Abril de 1968 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0540"
      ]
      109 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "109"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0545">By 1986 there were already 35 federal Three-Judge Panel Courts distributed in 18 circuits&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 106&#44; at 395&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0545"
      ]
      110 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "110"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0550"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> David Garc&#237;a Sarubbi&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Federalism and Constitutional Review in Mexico and the United States</span>&#44; 4 M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">exican</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eview</span> 35&#44; 42 &#40;2011&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0550"
      ]
      111 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "111"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0555"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 106&#44; at 394-395&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0555"
      ]
      112 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "112"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0560">M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">iguel de la</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">adrid</span>&#44; F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ifth</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">tate of the</span> N<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ation</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">eport to the</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">exican</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ongress</span> 29 &#40;Mexico&#44; Office of the President&#44; 1987&#41; &#40;emphasis added&#41;&#46; This document uses explicitly the wording &#8220;Constitutional court&#46;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 28&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0560"
      ]
      113 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "113"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0565">In contrast to the United States &#8212;where lower federal courts are established by Congress&#8212; the number and distribution of inferior federal courts in Mexico can be determined by the federal judiciary itself since 1987&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> H<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">&#233;ctor</span> F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ix</span>-F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ierro</span> &#38; H<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">&#233;ctor</span> F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ix</span>-Z<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">amudio</span>&#44; E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">l</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onsejo de la</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">udicatura</span> &#40;IIJ-UNAM&#44; 1996&#41;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">available at</span><a class="elsevierStyleInterRef" id="intr0015" href="http://www.bibliojuridica.org/libros/libro.htm?l=86">http&#58;&#47;&#47;www&#46;bibliojuridica&#46;org&#47;libros&#47;libro&#46;htm&#63;l&#61;86</a> &#40;last visited May 31&#44; 2012&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0565"
      ]
      114 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "114"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0570"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; as amended August&#44; 10&#44; 1987&#44; Art&#46; 107&#44; VIII&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#59; Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> October 25&#44; 1967&#44; art&#46; 107&#44; IX&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46; The Supreme Court&#44; however&#44; could still take on discretionally a &#8220;transcendental case&#8221; whose original jurisdiction corresponded in principle to the Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Lucio Cabrera&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">La Jurisprudencia de la Suprema Corte de Justicia y aspectos de sus facultades discrecionales</span>&#44; in 1 D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">erecho constitucional comparado</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">&#233;xico</span>-E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">stados</span> U<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">nidos</span> 477&#44; 482-484 &#40;James Frank Smith ed&#46;&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 1990&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0570"
      ]
      115 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "115"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0575"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 105-6&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0575"
      ]
      116 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "116"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0580"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> H&#233;ctor Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Los tribunales y salas constitucionales en Am&#233;rica Latina</span>&#44; in E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">studios en homenaje a don</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">antiago</span> B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">arajas</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ontes de</span> O<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ca</span> 59 &#40;IIJ-UNAM&#44; 1995&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0580"
      ]
      117 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "117"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0585"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> H&#233;ctor Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">La reforma en el derecho de Amparo</span>&#44; in E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">nsayos sobre el derecho de amparo</span> 479&#44; 502 &#40;Miguel L&#243;pez Ruiz ed&#46;&#44; IIJ-UNAM&#44; 1993&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0585"
      ]
      118 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "118"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0590"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;Decreto por el que se declaran reformados diversos art&#237;culos de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Decree to amend several articles of the Mexican Constitution&#93; &#91;hereinafter <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Reforma Constitucional 1994</span>&#93;&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 31 de diciembre de 1994&#44; Primera Secci&#243;n&#44; pp&#46; 2-11 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0590"
      ]
      119 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "119"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0595">By means of this reform the Supreme Court returned to its original configuration of eleven members&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> December 31&#44; 1994&#44; Art&#46; 94&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n&#44; Art&#46; 94 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0595"
      ]
      120 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "120"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0600">The so-called &#8220;abstract constitutional review&#8221; &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">abstrakte Normenkontrolle</span>&#41; is the procedure by which certain political bodies &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">e&#46;g</span>&#46; the Senate&#44; a minority in Parliament&#44; the state government&#44; a state Parliament&#44; etcetera&#41; have the ability to challenge at the constitutional court the validity of laws before &#8212;or irrespective of&#8212; their application&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Stone Sweet&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 2&#44; at 224&#46; The procedure introduced in Mexico included not only statutes bot also other kinds of general norms such as regulations&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> December 31&#44; 1994&#44; Art&#46; 105&#44; II&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0600"
      ]
      121 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "121"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0605"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> December 31&#44; 1994&#44; Art&#46; 105&#44; I&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46; While this mechanism already existed as a normative possibility of constitutional review since the Constitution of 1857 and was retaken almost in the same terms by the framers of 1917&#44; its limited wording had resulted in a lack of practical application&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">os&#233;</span> R<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">am&#243;n</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">a controversia constitucional</span> 108-11 &#40;Mexico&#44; Porr&#250;a&#44; 2008&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0605"
      ]
      122 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "122"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0610"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> December 31&#44; 1994&#44; Art&#46; 105&#44; I-II&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0610"
      ]
      123 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "123"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0615">The statement of legislative intent of President Zedillo did not give any argument to justify the need for a qualified majority for such a decision to achieve <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">erga omnes</span> effects&#46; While the original bill actually envisaged a majority of nine Justices&#44; the Senate reduced it to eight arguing the need for the new mechanisms to be &#8220;viable&#46;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;Decreto que reforma y adiciona diversos art&#237;culos de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Decree to amend and add several articles to the Mexican Constitution&#93;&#44; Diario de los Debates del Senado &#91;Senate&#8217;s Congressional Record&#93;&#44; LVI Legislatura&#44; A&#241;o I&#44; Primer Periodo Ordinario&#44; Diario 14&#44; Diciembre 16 de 1994&#44; &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">available at</span><a class="elsevierStyleInterRef" id="intr0020" href="http://www.senado.gob.mx/index.php?ver=sp&amp;mn=3&amp;sm=3&amp;lg=LVI_I&amp;id=303">http&#58;&#47;&#47;www&#46;senado&#46;gob&#46;mx&#47;index&#46;php&#63;ver&#61;sp&#38;mn&#61;3&#38;sm&#61;3&#8822;&#61;LVI&#95;I&#38;id&#61;303</a> &#40;last visited May 31&#44; 2012&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0615"
      ]
      124 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "124"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0620"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See supra</span> section II&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 189&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0620"
      ]
      125 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "125"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0625"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> August 10&#44; 1987&#44; Art&#46; 107&#44; VIII&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0625"
      ]
      126 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "126"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0630"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> October 25&#44; 1967&#44; Art&#46; 107&#44; IX&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0630"
      ]
      127 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "127"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0635">&#8220;Decreto que reforma y adiciona diversos art&#237;culos de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Decree to amend and add several articles to the Mexican Constitution&#93;&#44; Diario de los Debates del Senado &#91;Senate&#8217;s Congressional Record&#93;&#44; LVI Legislatura&#44; A&#241;o I&#44; Primer Periodo Ordinario&#44; Diario 14&#44; Diciembre 16 de 1994&#44; &#40;Mex&#46;&#41; &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0635"
      ]
      128 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "128"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0640"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> December 31&#44; 1994&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0640"
      ]
      129 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "129"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0645">Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> June 11&#44; 1999&#44; Art&#46; 94&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41; &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46; Whereas these amendments were argued again under the discourse of the specialized constitutional court&#44; the Senate mentioned that the idea was rather inspired by the American writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">certiorari</span>&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 115-116&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0645"
      ]
      130 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "130"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0650"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ommers</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 31&#44; at 51-52&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0650"
      ]
      131 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "131"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0655"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">chlaich</span> &#38; K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">orioth</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 28&#44; at 128-129&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0655"
      ]
      132 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "132"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0660"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 106&#44; at 407&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0660"
      ]
      133 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "133"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0665"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Garc&#237;a Sarubbi&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 110&#44; at 42&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0665"
      ]
      134 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "134"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0670">While the organ responsible for the administration of the federal judiciary is &#8212;also since 1994&#8212; the Federal Judicial Council &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Consejo de la Judicatura Federal</span>&#41;&#44; one of its seven members is the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court itself and three more are appointed by the Supreme Court sitting <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">en banc</span>&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ix</span>-F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ierro</span> &#38; F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ix</span>-Z<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">amudio</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 113&#46; Furthermore&#44; a qualified majority of the court can overrule the council&#8217;s decisions&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span>&#44; June 11&#44; 1999&#44; art&#46; 100&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0670"
      ]
      135 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "135"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0675">Whereas in 1994 there were 83 Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts distributed in 23 federal circuits&#44; in 2009 there were 195 of these courts distributed in 31 federal circuits&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">onsejo de la</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">udicatura</span> F<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ederal</span> &#91;Federal Judicial Council&#93;&#44; A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">tlas</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">urisdiccional</span> 2009&#58; <span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">conformaci&#243;n de distritos y circuitos judiciales federales</span> 8 &#40;Mexico&#44; 2009&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0675"
      ]
      136 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "136"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0680"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">rturo</span> Z<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ald&#237;var</span>&#44; H<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">acia una nueva</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ey de</span> A<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">mparo</span> 2-13 &#40;IIJ-UNAM&#44; 2002&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0680"
      ]
      137 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "137"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0685">In 1999 the Supreme Court had appointed a commission of academics and practitioners to elaborate a draft for a new <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> bill&#46; In 2001 the commission&#8217;s proposal was fundamentally approved by the court and it was sent &#8212;as the judiciary lacked initiative right&#8212; to the other two federal powers&#46; However&#44; it was not until 2004 that a group of senators actually introduced the court&#8217;s draft as a bill&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 118&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0685"
      ]
      138 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "138"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0690">Z<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ald&#237;var</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 136&#44; at 10 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0690"
      ]
      139 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "139"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0695"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 118&#59; &#8220;Dictamen de las Comisiones Unidas de Puntos Constitucionales&#59; y de Estudios Legislativos&#44; el que contiene proyecto de decreto por el que se reforman&#44; adicionan y derogan diversas disposiciones de los art&#237;culos 94&#44; 100&#44; 103&#44; 104 y 107 de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Opinion of the Constitutional and Legislative Congressional Commitees to the decree to amend&#44; add&#44; and derogate several provisions of articles 94&#44; 100&#44; 103&#44; 104&#44; and 107 of the Mexican Constitution&#93; &#91;hereinafter Dictamen <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">de reforma constitucional en Amparo</span>&#93;&#44; Gaceta del Senado &#91;Senate&#8217;s Gazette&#93;&#44; 10 de Diciembre de 2009&#44; Tomo I&#44; pp&#46; 66-97 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0695"
      ]
      140 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "140"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0700"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Reforma constitucional en Amparo 2011&#44; supra</span> note 3&#59; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Reforma c</span>onstitucional en Derechos Humanos&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 3&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Compare</span> ZALD&#205;VAR&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 136&#44; at 10-13 &#40;a summary of the Supreme Court&#8217;s draft of 2001&#41; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">with</span> &#8220;Iniciativa de los senadores Manlio Fabio Beltrones Rivera&#44; Jes&#250;s Murillo Karam&#44; Fernando Castro Trenti y Pedro Joaqu&#237;n Coldwell&#44; del grupo parlamentario del Partido Revolucionario Institucional&#44; la que contiene proyecto de decreto por el que se reforman y adicionan los art&#237;culos 94&#44; 100&#44; 103&#44; 107 y 112 de la Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos&#8221; &#91;Bill of senators from the Institutional Revolutionary Party to amend articles 94&#44; 100&#44; 103&#44; 107&#44; and 112 of the Mexican Constitution&#93; &#91;hereinafter <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Iniciativa de reforma c</span>onstitucional en Amparo&#93;&#44; Gaceta del Senado &#91;Senate&#8217;s Gazzette&#93;&#44; 19 de Marzo de 2009&#44; Tomo I&#44; pp&#46; 80-99 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41; &#40;the senators&#8217; bill that resulted in the constitutional amendments of June 6&#44; 2011&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0700"
      ]
      141 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "141"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0705"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;Dictamen de las Comisiones Unidas de Gobernaci&#243;n&#59; de Justicia&#59; y de Estudios Legislativos&#44; Segunda&#44; el que contiene proyecto de decreto por el que se expide la Ley de Amparo&#8221; &#91;Opinion of the Government&#44; Justice&#44; and Legislative Congressional Commitees to the decree to enact the Amparo Law&#93; &#91;hereinafter Dictamen de Reforma a Ley de Amparo&#93;&#44; Gaceta del Senado &#91;Senate&#8217;s Gazette&#93;&#44; 6 de Octubre de 2011&#44; Tomo II&#44; pp&#46; 221-395 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0705"
      ]
      142 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "142"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0710"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 229&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0710"
      ]
      143 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "143"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0715"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span>&#44; art&#46; 103&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0715"
      ]
      144 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "144"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0720"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span></p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0720"
      ]
      145 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "145"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0725"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Id&#46;&#44;</span> art&#46; 107&#44; I &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0725"
      ]
      146 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "146"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0730"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;&#44;</span> art&#46; 107&#44; X&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0730"
      ]
      147 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "147"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0735"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Id&#46;</span> art&#46; 107&#44; III &#40;a&#41;&#46; This new requirement aimed at reducing the length of ordinary procedures&#46; For a succinct explanation of the specific reasons that led to this change see Z<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ald&#237;var</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 136&#44; at 129-33&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0735"
      ]
      148 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "148"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0740"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Iniciativa de Reforma Constitucional en Amparo&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 140&#44; at 81&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0740"
      ]
      149 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "149"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0745"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended&#44;</span> art&#46; 107&#44; II&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0745"
      ]
      150 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "150"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0750"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Garc&#237;a Sarubbi&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 110&#44; at 42&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0750"
      ]
      151 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "151"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0755">This criticism applies both to the different treatment of the same statute within two constitutional procedures &#40;i&#46;e&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> and abstract control of norms&#41; as well as to the differentiation of unconstitutional tax laws from other unconstitutional laws&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0755"
      ]
      152 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "152"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0760"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> Kenntner&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 50&#44; at 786 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46; Whereas for reasons that had more to do with judicial federalism than with the enforcement of fundamental rights&#44; the senators&#8217; bill that proposed the constitutional amendments to <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> explicitly addressed this problem&#46; They originally suggested &#8212;naming several examples from centralized systems of constitutional review&#8212; the establishment of discretional rejection powers for the Three-Judge Panel Circuit Courts in order to limit the filing of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo directo</span> against judgments of state supreme courts&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Iniciativa de reforma constitucional en Amparo&#44; supra</span> note 140&#44; at 82-9&#46; Nonetheless&#44; specifically that part of the proposal was rejected by the congressional commissions in charge of giving the first opinion to the draft and&#44; consequently&#44; it was removed from the bill&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Dictamen de reforma constitucional en Amparo&#44; supra note 139</span>&#44; at 79-80&#46; &#40;&#8220;&#8230;however&#44; these commissions do not share the proposal contained in the bill in the sense of limiting in some cases the admissibility of amparo directo &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">sic</span>&#41;&#44; setting as admission criteria &#91;the cases&#8217;&#93; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">importance</span> and <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">transcendence&#46;</span>&#8221;&#41; &#40;Author&#8217;s translation&#44; emphasis on the original&#46;&#41;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0760"
      ]
      153 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "153"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0765"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Z<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ald&#237;var</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 136&#44; at 129&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0765"
      ]
      154 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "154"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0770"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span>&#44; art&#46; 107&#44; III&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0770"
      ]
      155 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "155"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0775"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> art&#46; 94&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0775"
      ]
      156 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "156"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0780"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> art&#46; 107&#44; XIII&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0780"
      ]
      157 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "157"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0785"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Iniciativa de reforma constitucional en Amparo&#44; supra</span> note 140&#44; at 93-4&#59; Coss&#237;o&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 8&#44; at A18&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0785"
      ]
      158 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "158"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0790">See <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> section II&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 176&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0790"
      ]
      159 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "159"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0795">Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 1&#44; at 51&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0795"
      ]
      160 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "160"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0800"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 75&#46; While this complicated resolution included different majority constellations depending on each of the multiple issues that were dealt with&#44; the specific decision concerning the introduction of diffused control into the Mexican system was only approved by a majority of seven Justices&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 77-8&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0800"
      ]
      161 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "161"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0805"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 68-9&#46; The new constitutional wording is the following&#58; &#8220;Article 1&#46; In the United Mexican States all the persons will &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">sic</span>&#41; enjoy the human rights acknowledged in this Constitution and in the international treaties to which the Mexican State is a party&#44; as well as the guarantees for their protection&#44; whose enjoyment cannot be encroached or suspended but in the cases and under the circumstances that this Constitution establishes&#46;</p> <p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0805a">The norms related to human rights will be interpreted in conformity with this Constitution and with the international treaties on the subject favouring at all times the widest protection to the persons&#46;</p> <p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0805b">All the authorities&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">within the framework of their competences</span>&#44; have the obligation to promote&#44; respect&#44; protect and guarantee human rights in conformity with the principles of universality&#44; interdependence&#44; indivisibility and progressivity&#46; Consequently&#44; the State shall prevent&#44; investigate&#44; punish and repair the violations to human rights&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">in the terms the law establishes</span>&#8230;&#8221; &#40;Author&#8217;s translation&#44; emphasis added&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0805"
      ]
      162 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "162"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0810"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> H&#233;ctor Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Las reformas constitucionales mexicanas de junio de 2011 y sus efectos en el sistema interamericano de derechos humanos</span>&#44; in 1 E<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">l juicio de amparo</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 57&#44; at 462&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0810"
      ]
      163 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "163"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0815"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44; id&#46;</span> at 471&#59; Coss&#237;o&#44; supra note 8&#44; at A18&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">But see</span> Rold&#225;n Xopa&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 6&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0815"
      ]
      164 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "164"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0820"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 1&#44; at 70 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0820"
      ]
      165 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "165"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0825">Radilla-Pacheco v&#46; Mexico&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 4&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0825"
      ]
      166 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "166"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0830">All crimes that imply violations of human rights are considered of a non-military nature&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 82&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0830"
      ]
      167 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "167"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0835"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 91-105&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0835"
      ]
      168 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "168"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0840">The issue was brought up originally in May 2010 by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court as a consultation to the court sitting <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">en banc</span>&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010&#44; supra</span> note 1&#44; at 51&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0840"
      ]
      169 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "169"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0845">The opinion holding that alleged obligations could be deduced from the international judgment as a whole and not only from its operative paragraphs was shared by eight of the court&#8217;s Justices and had been decided already in September 2010&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 52&#46; Nonetheless&#44; the full resolution with the extent of these obligations was voted by the Supreme Court only after the &#8220;Constitutional Reform on Human Rights&#8221; had already been approved&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 64-5&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0845"
      ]
      170 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "170"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0850">Radilla-Pacheco v&#46; Mexico&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 4&#44; at 95 &#40;emphasis added&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0850"
      ]
      171 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "171"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0855"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010&#44; supra</span> note 1&#44; at 69-71&#59;Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 162&#44; at 470-1&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0855"
      ]
      172 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "172"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0860">Coss&#237;o&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 8&#44; at A18 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0860"
      ]
      173 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "173"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0865">This was precisely one of the reasons for three Justices to vote against the majority&#8217;s opinion&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;&#44; Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010&#44; supra</span> note 1&#44; at 110-1 &#40;Justice Pardo Rebolledo&#44; dissenting&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0865"
      ]
      174 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "174"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0870">Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; as amended&#44; art&#46; 1&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 10 de Junio de 2011 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46; &#40;Author&#8217;s translation&#46;&#41; A full transcription of the paragraph is provided at <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 161&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0870"
      ]
      175 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "175"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0875"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See supra</span> section III&#46; 2&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0875"
      ]
      176 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "176"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0880">What is more&#44; the few proposals that &#8212;to some extent&#8212; could have been interpreted this way were deliberately eliminated from the bill&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Iniciativa de reforma constitucional en Amparo&#44; supra</span> note 140&#44; at 82-9&#59; Dictamen de reforma constitucional en Amparo&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 139&#44; at 79-80&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0880"
      ]
      177 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "177"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0885"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010&#44; supra</span> note 1&#44; at 93-4 &#40;Justice Aguirre Anguiano&#44; dissenting&#41;&#46; This is independent of the fact that the constitutional amendments also introduced in the same paragraph an explicit duty for the State &#8220;to prevent&#44; investigate&#44; punish&#44; and repair the violations to human rights&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">in the terms the law establishes&#46;</span>&#8221; Mex&#46; Const&#46; Art&#46; 1&#46; &#40;Author&#8217;s translation&#44; emphasis added&#41;&#46; This requirement for a regulatory legislation has been rather understood only related to State liability &#40;<span class="elsevierStyleItalic">i&#46;e</span>&#46; damages&#41; and not to the rules of constitutional scrutiny&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Reforma constitucional en Derechos Humanos</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 3&#44; at 5&#46; Still&#44; the fact that after the amendments regulatory legislation is required for pecuniary reparation does not mean that such legislation is now unnecessary when it comes to the specific mechanisms to grant relief&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0885"
      ]
      178 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "178"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0890"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Contra&#44; e&#46;g&#46;&#44; Iniciativa de Ley de Control Difuso&#44; supra</span> note 16&#44; at 107&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0890"
      ]
      179 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "179"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0895"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Radilla-Pacheco v&#46; Mexico&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 4&#44; at 95&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0895"
      ]
      180 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "180"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0900"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 94-6&#46; Obiter dictum &#40;or plainly dictum&#41; is a statement that &#8212;albeit included in the body of the court&#8217;s opinion&#8212; is not an essential part of the court&#8217;s decision&#46; In systems that are based on judicial precedent it is therefore not considered to be an argument binding for further cases&#46; See W<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">illiam</span> B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">urnham</span>&#44; I<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ntroduction to the</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">aw and the</span> L<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">egal</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ystem of the</span> U<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">nited</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">tates</span> 67-8 &#40;St&#46; Paul&#44; Thomson&#47;West&#44; 4th ed&#46; 2006&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0900"
      ]
      181 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "181"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0905"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Radilla-Pacheco v&#46; Mexico&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 4&#44; at 75-82&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0905"
      ]
      182 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "182"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0910">This statement of course does not pretend to imply in any way that the respective amendments should be a task of the Supreme Court&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0910"
      ]
      183 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "183"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0915"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Radilla-Pacheco v&#46; Mexico&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 4&#44; at 75-82&#46; The references to the Federal Criminal Code within the judgment were made in regard to the material definition of the crime &#8220;forced disappearance of persons&#8221;&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 88-91&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0915"
      ]
      184 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "184"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0920">The Inter-American Court was not categorical on this regard&#46; While it concluded that the writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> was in this case not an effective mechanism to challenge military jurisdiction &#8212;which constituted a violation of Article 25 &#40;1&#41; of the American Convention&#8212;&#44; the court did not censor explicitly the rules that led to this lack of effectiveness&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id</span>&#46; at 82-4&#46; The judgment&#8217;s reasoning suggests that the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> writ through which Radilla&#8217;s daughter had challenged the allocation of jurisdiction to military courts failed because Article 10 of the valid Amparo Law banned victims to file this writ on issues that did not relate directly to the reparation of the damage&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 82-3&#46; The final dismissal of the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo en revisi&#243;n</span> filed by Radilla&#8217;s daughter against this military allocation was nonetheless based exclusively on the grounds that this issue had already been resolved by the same Three-Judge Panel Circuit Court in a former &#8220;conflict of jurisdiction&#8221; &#40;i&#46;e&#46; in an ordinary federal appeal that was filed independently by the military prosecutor against the initial referral of the case to military courts&#41;&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 83&#46; If that previous &#8220;conflict of jurisdiction&#8221; was of a non-constitutional nature&#44; then the final dismissal of the <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> filed by Radilla&#8217;s daughter was evidently a mistake from the corresponding Three-Judge Panel Circuit Court and thus not necessarily a legislative flaw&#46; It was perhaps for this reason that the Inter-American Court did not make further reference to the Amparo Law in the operative paragraphs of the judgment&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 105-7&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0920"
      ]
      185 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "185"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0925"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010&#44; supra</span> note 1&#44; at 76-7&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0925"
      ]
      186 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "186"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0930">For a full transcription of this article in this paper see <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 11&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0930"
      ]
      187 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "187"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0935"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">toca</span> Penal Art&#237;culo 43&#47;11&#44;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 9&#44; at 22&#59; Constituci&#243;n Pol&#237;tica de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos &#91;Const&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span> February 19&#44; 2005&#44; art&#46; 14&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 5 de Febrero de 1917 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#46; &#40;&#8220;&#8230;In criminal trials it is forbidden&#44; either through analogical reasoning or even through majority of reason&#44; to determine a penalty which is not established by a statute that is exactly applicable to the respective felony&#8230;&#8221;&#41; &#40;Author&#8217;s translation&#46;&#41;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0935"
      ]
      188 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "188"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0940"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">toca</span> Penal Art&#237;culo 43&#47;11&#44;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 9&#44; at 23-4&#59; B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ohlander</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 12&#44; at 18-27&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0940"
      ]
      189 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "189"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0945"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 3-5&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0945"
      ]
      190 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "190"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0950">C&#243;digo Penal para el Estado de Nuevo Le&#243;n &#91;Nuevo Le&#243;n St&#46; Crim&#46; Code&#46;&#93;&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended</span>&#44; Art&#46; 224&#44; Peri&#243;dico Oficial del Estado de Nuevo Le&#243;n &#91;Nuevo L&#233;on Official Journal&#93;&#44; 29 de Enero de 1997&#44; V &#40;Mex&#46;&#41; &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0950"
      ]
      191 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "191"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0955"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">toca</span> Penal Art&#237;culo 43&#47;11&#44;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 9&#44; at 8&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0955"
      ]
      192 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "192"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0960"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 24&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0960"
      ]
      193 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "193"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0965"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 29-30&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0965"
      ]
      194 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "194"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0970">As mentioned above&#44; these are still being debated and are more a task for criminal law scholars&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Rold&#225;n Xopa&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 6&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0970"
      ]
      195 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "195"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0975"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">workin</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 23&#44; at 27&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0975"
      ]
      196 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "196"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0980"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;&#44; e&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> 28 U&#46;S&#46;C&#46; &#167; 1257 &#40;2006&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0980"
      ]
      197 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "197"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0985"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> J<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ackson</span> &#38; T<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ushnet</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 33&#44; at 458&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0985"
      ]
      198 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "198"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0990"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Expediente Varios 912&#47;2010&#44; supra</span> note 1&#44; at 70&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0990"
      ]
      199 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "199"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar0995">Whereas those affected could have probably filed a writ of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span>&#44; this mechanism &#8212;as it has been explained with some detail above&#8212; falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of federal judges who might or might not share the state court&#8217;s interpretation&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn0995"
      ]
      200 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "200"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1000"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> Hoffmann-Riem&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 22&#44; at 179&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1000"
      ]
      201 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "201"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1005"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> &#8220;<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">toca</span> Penal Art&#237;culo 43&#47;11&#44;&#8221; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 9&#44; at 20&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1005"
      ]
      202 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "202"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1010">Still&#44; if there would have been a victim&#44; such <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> would have probably been dismissed on the grounds of Article 10 of the Amparo Law&#46; As mentioned before&#44; this rule bans the victims of a crime to file <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> when the challenged decision does not relate directly to the reparation of the damage&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> the explanation given at <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 184 of this paper&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1010"
      ]
      203 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "203"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1015"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See Iniciativa de Ley de Control Difuso&#44; supra</span> note 16&#44; at 111 &#40;author&#8217;s translation&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1015"
      ]
      204 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "204"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1020"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id&#46;</span> at 112 &#40;Art&#46; 5 of the bill&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1020"
      ]
      205 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "205"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1025"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See id</span>&#46; &#40;Art&#46; 6 of the bill&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1025"
      ]
      206 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "206"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1030">These judgments are in any case a minority given the all-inclusive nature of <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo directo&#46; See</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">oss&#237;o</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 27&#44; at 179&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1030"
      ]
      207 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "207"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1035"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">E&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> Coss&#237;o&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 8&#44; at A18&#59; Fix-Zamudio&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 162&#44; at 471&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1035"
      ]
      208 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "208"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1040"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Cf&#46;</span> Kenntner&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 50&#44; at 786&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1040"
      ]
      209 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "209"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1045">So far this work has referred to the different treatment to constitutional control of general norms when the Supreme Court solves an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> by a qualified majority of eight votes&#59; when the same court solves an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> by just a simple majority&#59; when it solves a mechanism of abstract control of norms&#44; and when it solves an <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Amparo</span> related to tax law&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See supra</span> Section III&#46;2&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1045"
      ]
      210 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "210"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1050"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Ley de Amparo &#91;L&#46;A&#46;&#93; &#91;Amparo Law&#93;&#44; as <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">amended</span>&#44; art&#46; 193&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 24 de Junio de 2011 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#59; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Dictamen de Reforma a Ley de Amparo</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 141&#44; at 365 &#40;Art&#46; 224 of the new bill&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1050"
      ]
      211 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "211"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1055">Even though there is a procedure to denounce two contradictory interpretations called <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">contradicci&#243;n de tesis</span>&#44; the decision that solves the contradiction cannot have effects within the specific controversies that generated them&#46; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> Ley de Amparo &#91;L&#46;A&#46;&#93; &#91;Amparo Law&#93; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">as amended&#44;</span> art&#46; 197&#44; Diario Oficial de la Federaci&#243;n &#91;D&#46;O&#46;&#93;&#44; 24 de Junio de 2011 &#40;Mex&#46;&#41;&#59; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">Dictamen de Reforma a Ley de Amparo&#44; supra</span> note 141&#44; at 366 &#40;art&#46; 226&#44; paragraph 3&#44; of the new bill&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1055"
      ]
      212 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "212"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1060"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See&#44; e&#46;g&#46;&#44;</span> Raz&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 23&#44; at 213-4&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1060"
      ]
      213 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "213"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1065"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> D<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">workin</span>&#44; <span class="elsevierStyleItalic">supra</span> note 23&#44; at 27&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1065"
      ]
      214 => array:3 [
        "etiqueta" => "214"
        "nota" => "<p class="elsevierStyleNotepara" id="npar1070"><span class="elsevierStyleItalic">See</span> M<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">arcel</span> K<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">au</span>&#44; U<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">nited</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">tates</span> S<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">upreme</span> C<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">ourt und</span> B<span class="elsevierStyleSmallCaps">undesverfassungsgericht</span> 1-2 &#40;Heidelberg&#44; Springer-Max-Planck-Institut f&#252;r ausl&#228;ndisches &#246;ffentliches Recht und V&#246;lkerrecht&#44; 2007&#41;&#46;</p>"
        "identificador" => "fn1070"
      ]
    ]
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Article information
ISSN: 18700578
Original language: English
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2016 May 6 8 14
2016 April 5 7 12
2016 March 11 15 26
2016 February 1 0 1
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