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Valeria Vegh Weis

Valeria Vegh Weis is a Research Group Leader at the School of Law and a Research Fellow at the Zukunftskolleg (University of Konstanz, Germany). Her current research project focuses on the role of victim organisations dealing with the legacies of massive human rights violations. She is also a Professor at Buenos Aires University and Quilmes National University. She is the Vice President of the Instituto Latinoamericano de Criminología y Desarrollo Social http://www.derecho.uba.ar/noticias/2019/lanzamiento-del-instituto-latinoamericano-de-criminologia-y-desarrollo-social.

She is a prolific Argentinean-German author who has had more than 100 articles and book chapters published in Spanish, English, Portuguese and German https://uni-konstanz.academia.edu/ValeriaVeghWeis. She specializes in criminology, criminal law, international criminal law and transitional justice, which she approaches from a decolonial and socio-legal perspective. Vegh Weis won several awards, including the Critical Criminology of the Year Award by the American Society of Criminology https://www.uni-konstanz.de/zukunftskolleg/news/current-news/single-news/critical-criminologists-year-award-for-valeria-vegh-weis/. She is the author of the Principles on Public Policies for Memory in the Americas (Principios sobre Políticas Públicas de Memoria en las Americas) approved by the Organization of American States https://www.oas.org/es/CIDH/jsForm/?File=/es/cidh/r/mvj/principiosbp.asp.

Her research has been supported, among others, by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, the Max Planck Society, the Fulbright Commission and the Horizon European Union Programme.

Biography

Vegh Weis graduated summa cum laude from Buenos Aires University Law School. She pursued post-graduate studies in Criminal Law at Buenos Aires University School of Law and a Master in International Legal Studies at New York University. She also pursued a PhD in Law at the same university and defended her thesis on a Marxist perspective of criminal selectivity. She received also received funding from CONICET, Hauser Global, the International Law and Human Rights and the Transitional Justice Program, among many others. She has been a Visiting Scholar at Strathmore University, Freie Universitat Berlin,University of Oxford and Waseda University and a Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History. She has been serving on the Argentinean Judiciary since 2005 and has also worked as Legal Expert at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights

Books

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