Rafael Domingo Oslé (born 1963) is a Spanish legal historian and professor of law. He holds the ÃÂlvaro dâÂÂOrs Professorship at the University of Navarra and is a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University.
Domingo earned his PhD in law (1987) from the University of Navarra with highest honors. He began his teaching career as an assistant professor at the University of Navarra (1987âÂÂ1989) before joining the University of Cantabria, where he was promoted to Associate Professor (1989) and subsequently to Professor of Law (1993).
In 1995, he returned to the University of Navarra as the successor to his mentor, ÃÂlvaro d'Ors. He served as the Vice Dean (1995âÂÂ1996) and then as the Dean of the Law School from 1996 to 1999. During his tenure, he founded the Garrigues Chair in Global Law and established the Anglo-American Law Program.
He conducted post-doctoral research as an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. He has held visiting positions at Columbia University and Sapienza University of Rome. Since 2012, his research has focused on the intersection of global law and religion. Since 2018, he has also served as a visiting professor at the Strathmore University School of Law in Nairobi, Kenya.
Domingo advocates for a "person-centered" global law paradigm. His 2010 book, The New Global Law, is cited as a foundational text in international legal theory.
As a public intellectual, he has been interviewed more than 40 times on CNN. His book Law and Religion in a Secular Age (2025) explores the harmony between secular and religious legal systems.