A native of Bolivia, Félix Huanca Ayaviri's own pathbreaking research looks in new ways at Native American legal institutions from the vantage point of law and economics. He received a law degree from the Universidad Mayor de San Andrés, where he teaches constitutional law and law and economics. He received a master's degree and a doctorate in law and economics from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. He has served as Academic Dean at the law school of the Universidad Iberoamericana. He also lectures at the Universidad Católica Boliviana, the Universidad Tecnológica Boliviana and the Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar. In recent days, has been been nominated to sit on Bolivia's Constitutional Court.
Articles
Books
Un nuevo códigto civil para el siglo XXI: un ejercicio académico (with Juan Javier del Granado, Alejanadro Guzmán Brito, Alfredo Bullard González, Bruno Meyerhof Salama, Carlos Pablo Márquez, Crispulo Marmolejo Gonzáles, Dante Haro Reyes, Eduardo Andrés Caamaño Rojo, Eduardo Andrés Pigretti, Fernando Castillo Cadena, Francisco González de Cossío, Francisco Reyes Villamizar, Hugo Alejandro Acciarri, Luciano Bennetti Timm, María del Pilar Bonilla, Mateo Miró, Maximiliano Marzetti, Mónika Infante Henríquez, Pablo Alejandro Iannello, Rafael Mery Nieto, and Santiago Montt), Juan Javier del Granado (2009)
Legal scholars in the Anglo-American common law can overlook the connection between particular ordinances and...
Presentations