Contenido y alcance de la identidad de la persona sujeta a adopción internacional en México y su conformidad con el sistema internacional de derechos humanos.
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Miranda Delgado, María Elena
Advisor(s)
González Marín, Nuria
Type
text::thesis::doctoral thesis
Abstract
Legal research paper that studies the nature and scope of the Right to Identity of the adopted child and
seeks to answer the following question: how does Mexican law protects the human right to know the
biological origins of an adopted child and, is this protection in accordance with the international
parameters? Recognized in 2014 as a human right by the Mexican Constitution, it studies the federal
and local civil legislations to stress the intimate relation between the concepts of personal identity,
kinship and community. It particularly focuses on the conformation of the Legal Identity by two other
human rights: the right to a name and nationality. The study of the international instruments, universal
and regional, shows the influence upon domestic legislation. It explores the intersection between the
right to identity and international adoption, through a concrete case of identity transformation: the
adopted child's right to know his/her biological origins as provided by the terms of the 1989 United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and the provisions of the 1993 Convention on Protection
of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption. This analysis is enriched by
references to a special Spanish Act on international adoption and related jurisprudence from the
Interamerican Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights.
seeks to answer the following question: how does Mexican law protects the human right to know the
biological origins of an adopted child and, is this protection in accordance with the international
parameters? Recognized in 2014 as a human right by the Mexican Constitution, it studies the federal
and local civil legislations to stress the intimate relation between the concepts of personal identity,
kinship and community. It particularly focuses on the conformation of the Legal Identity by two other
human rights: the right to a name and nationality. The study of the international instruments, universal
and regional, shows the influence upon domestic legislation. It explores the intersection between the
right to identity and international adoption, through a concrete case of identity transformation: the
adopted child's right to know his/her biological origins as provided by the terms of the 1989 United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and the provisions of the 1993 Convention on Protection
of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption. This analysis is enriched by
references to a special Spanish Act on international adoption and related jurisprudence from the
Interamerican Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights.
License
Acceso Abierto
URL License
How to cite
Miranda Delgado, M. E. (2020). Contenido y alcance de la identidad de la persona sujeta a adopción internacional en México y su conformidad con el sistema internacional de derechos humanos. (Tesis de Doctorado). Universidad Panamericana.
Table of contents
CAPÍTULO I. NOCIÓN DE IDENTIDAD -- CAPÍTULO II. LA IDENTIDAD GENÉTICA -- CAPÍTULO III. MARCO NORMATIVO INTERNACIONAL -- CAPÍTULO IV. EL DERECHO AL NOMBRE EN EL MARCO NORMATIVO MEXICANO -- CAPÍTULO V. EL DERECHO A LA NACIONALIDAD EN EL MARCO NORMATIVO MEXICANO -- CAPÍTULO VI. EL DERECHO HUMANO A LA IDENTIDAD -- CAPITULO VII. REFLEXIONES EN TORNO A CONOCER EL ORIGEN DE LA PERSONA ADOPTADA -- CAPÍTULO VIII. LA ADOPCIÓN INTERNACIONAL Y EL DERECHO A CONOCER EL PROPIO ORIGEN DENTRO DE LA LEGISLACIÓN ESPAÑOLA
