Does the Inter-American Court behave like an international court? : some reflections about monitoring compliance in the case “Artavia Murillo vs. Costa Rica”

Authors

  • Max Silva Abbott
  • Ligia de Jesús Castaldi

Keywords:

Inter-American Court, Artavia, Costa Rica, In vitro fertilization, Constitutional Chamber, Provisional measure, Monitoring/supervision of compliance, Res judicata, Conventionality control

Abstract

This article describes the monitoring of compliance with the judgment in “Artavia Murillo et al. v/ Costa Rica (‘in vitro fertilization’ case)”, issued by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in 2012, where the court ordered Costa Rica to lift its ban on in vitro fertilization and to subsidize it through its Social Security System. In particular, the paper analyzes the Court’s actions in the aftermath of the judgment, in provisional measures, the supervision of compliance hearing and the supervision of compliance resolution in relation to the “Artavia” case, all of which show different substantive and formal irregularities that affect both the case in point as well as the Inter-American System of Human Rights in general. 

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Author Biographies

Max Silva Abbott

Doctor en Derecho por la Universidad de Navarra. Profesor de Filosofía del Derecho y de Introducción al Derecho de la Facultad de Derecho, Universidad San Sebastián, sede Concepción, Chile

Ligia de Jesús Castaldi

Master of Laws (LL.M.) por Harvard Law School. Profesora de Derecho Internacional y Derechos Humanos, Ave Maria School of Law, Estados Unidos

Published

24-05-2017

How to Cite

Silva Abbott, M., & Castaldi, L. de J. (2017). Does the Inter-American Court behave like an international court? : some reflections about monitoring compliance in the case “Artavia Murillo vs. Costa Rica”. Prudentia Iuris, (82), 19–58. Retrieved from http://200.16.86.39/index.php/PRUDENTIA/article/view/381

Issue

Section

Part I. International Professorship Natural Law and Human Person