Revista Estudios Socio-Jurídicos is an academic journal reviewed under the double-blind modality, which presents the results of research in fields such as legal theory, legal sociology, and legal anthropology, as well as the traditional areas of the legal sphere (public law, private law, criminal law, human rights, and international law) from interdisciplinary perspectives, on a semi-annual basis. Part of its thematic collection includes the publication of the following special editions: “Justicia Transicional: memoria colectiva, reparación, justicia y democracia (Transitional Justice: Collective Memory, Reparation, Justice, and Democracy); Derechos Económicos Sociales y Culturales (Social and Cultural Economic Rights); Derechos, Sociedad y Constitución: veinte años de la Constitución colombiana de 1991 (Rights, Society, and Constitution: Twenty Years of the Constitution of Colombia of 1991); Violencia y Justicia (Violence and Justice); Seguridad Ciudadana (Citizen Security); Procesos de paz, deberes de los Estados y derechos de las víctimas (Peace Processes, the Duties of the States, and the Rights of Victims); Tierras, Guerra y Estado (Lands, War, and State); Género, Discriminación y Violencia (Gender, Discrimination, and Violence).” 

The journal aims to contribute to the development and circulation of research in these areas, with an emphasis on the observation and analysis of the Latin American reality as the key reference, and without restricting the contributions concerning other latitudes. The first issue corresponds to the January–June term, whereas the second publication spans July–December.


DOI:https://doi.org/10.12804/esj

Clasificación OCDE:
Gran área: Ciencias Sociales
Área conocimiento: Derecho
Disciplina: Derecho

Vol. 28 No. 1 (2026): Decoloniality and Transformative Constitutionalism

Decoloniality and Transformative Constitutionalism
Vol. 28 No. 1 (2026)

Despite clear resonances between the epistemic critique of Western legal thought and the epistemic agenda of transformative constitutionalism, there has been relatively little cross-fertilization between these two conversations.  This special issue seeks to foster that conversation.  We seek to place transformative constitutionalism’s epistemic frameworks in the context of a broader history about the movement and imposition of so-called “modern,” “liberal,” and “Western” legal categories across time and space, particularly in the Global South.

Published: 2026-01-15

DOI: https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/sociojuridicos/a.15704

Marketing of Breast Milk Substitutes in Argentina. A Legal Analysis of Cases

Ana María Bonet , Esteban Piva, Maria Cristina Alé, Maria Celeste Nessier, Maria Elisa Zapata, Paula Gomez, Veronica Risso Patron, Mishel Unar Munguia
  • Páges : 1-68 |
  • 0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/sociojuridicos/a.15506
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/sociojuridicos/a.15418

Contractual asymmetry: Wrap contracts as transgressors of consumer autonomy

Español Español, Español Español, Español Español, Español Español, Gabriel Ravelo-Franco
  • Páges : 1-26 |
  • 0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/sociojuridicos/a.15569

Citizen Participation in Environmental Defense Related to Fracking Projects in Colombia

Mariela Méndez Cuéllar, Germán Alfonso López Daza, Luis Eduardo Rodríguez Quintero
  • Páges : 1-37 |
  • 0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/sociojuridicos/a.15459
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