Maritime Piracy in the Modern Era in Latin America Discrepancies in the Regulation

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Amarilla Kiss

Absztrakt

Maritime piracy is an activity that was considered defunct long ago and that Latin American countries experience it again in the 21st century. Since 2016 the number of attacks has increased dramatically involving armed robbery, kidnapping and massacre. Modern day piracy has nothing to do with the romantic illusion of the pirates of the Caribbean, this phenomenon is associated with the governmental, social or economic crisis of a state. When it appears, we can make further conclusions regarding the general conditions of the society in these states. But do these attacks really constitute piracy under international law? Does Latin American piracy have unique features that are different from piracy in the rest of the world? The study attempts to answer the questions why piracy matters in Latin America and how it relates to drug trafficking and terrorism. Apart from that, the study presents a legal aspect comparing the regulation of international law to domestic law, especially to the national law of Latin American states.

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Kiss, A. (2020). Maritime Piracy in the Modern Era in Latin America: Discrepancies in the Regulation. Acta Hispanica, (II), 121–128. https://doi.org/10.14232/actahisp.2020.0.121-128
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Információk a szerzőről

Amarilla Kiss, Institute of International Studies and Political Science, Pázmány Péter Catholic University

Amarilla Kiss graduated as a lawyer at the University of Szeged, currently she is a lecturer at the Institute of International Studies and Political Science at Pazmany Peter Catholic University (PPCU), Budapest. She works as the unit leader of public international law and European law at the Deaprtment of International Studies at PPCU. Her research interests lie in the area of the international law of the sea, maritime piracy, international courts and the horizontal issues of public international law. She has presented at various international conferences, including the 3rd international congress of the  Mexican Association of Political Science (AMECIP) in Guadalajara in 2015 and the 50th anniversary congress of the Latin American Studies Association in New York in 2016. She also served as a  visiting lecturer at the Catholic University of Portugal and Lille Catholic University. She won a scholarship of PPCU in 2015 funding young researchers and received a grant from the International Political Studies Association in 2016.

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