Abstract

Abstract The chapter focuses on contemporary international law in Spain and Portugal. There are similitudes in the conception of international law and the experiences of Spain and Portugal in the last fifty years as both countries defined a new commitment to international law and human rights in their democratic constitutions of the 1970s and became members of the European Union (EU) in 1986. In this chapter the reader will find a two-country study, the conceptions and practices of international law in Spain and Portugal. In both cases, they consider certain features that best describe each country’s concept of international law, both in theory and practice.

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