Writ of mandamus in Uruguay. Follow-up research

La acción de amparo en Uruguay. Complemento de investigación

Risso Ferrand, Martín - Garat, María Paula - Rainaldi, Stefanía - Guerra, Martín - Kazarez, Melanie - Pintos, Emanuel
Detalles Bibliográficos
2020
writ of mandamus
human rights
State
constitutional law
Constitution
Law 16.011
protection of human rights
acción de amparo
derechos humanos
Estado
derecho constitucional
Constitución
Ley 16.011
garantía de los derechos humanos
Español
Universidad Católica del Uruguay
LIBERI
https://revistas.ucu.edu.uy/index.php/revistadederecho/article/view/2246
https://hdl.handle.net/10895/4212
Acceso abierto
Resumen:
Sumario:The purpose of this publication is to adjunct a research, already published on Revista de Derecho n. 16 (July-December, 2017). In said research, it was made apparent that the vast majority of petitions for writs of mandamus were denied by the courts. This follow-up research aims to verify if said tendency remained unaltered and methodize the reasons given by the judges to deny the petitions, in order to, in the end, propose an amending act which intends to allow the writ of mandamus to achieve its intended purpose, that is, to be a remedy for cases where human rights are violated. So as to achieve that, all final decisions from a Civil Court of Appeals regarding a writ of mandamus petition between October 2018th and September 2019th were collected. Then, all decisions regarding “medical writs of mandamus” were discarded, as well as all petitions not aimed against the State. The decisions that were left, were then divided by its result and, finally, each was scrutinized on the reasons given by the court for its judgement. In total, three hundred and sixty decisions were issued, of which only twenty-two were “not medical writ of mandamus”. Twenty of them were rejected based on a strict interpretation of the requirements of the law N° 16.011, with no regards of the constitutional principles on the matter nor the hermeneutical rules in cases involving human rights.