Torrecuadrada-García-Lozano, S. (Soledad)
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- Los hijos del enemigo: las víctimas silenciosas de los crímenes sexuales(Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Navarra, 2017) Torrecuadrada-García-Lozano, S. (Soledad)Si los niños, debido a su vulnerabilidad, son víctimas de los conflictos armados en mayor medida que los adultos y los problemas originados por la guerra pueden lastrar su futuro, hay unos niños de los que no se habla, que sufren los efectos de la contienda una vez que esta ha concluido: son los hijos del enemigo, los nacidos como consecuencia de los crímenes sexuales, que debido a su origen son rechazados sistemáticamente por las comunidades maternas. Al estudio de la vulneración de sus derechos dedicaremos las páginas que componen este trabajo.
- La sucesión entre Organizaciones Internacionales y la Unión Europea(Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Navarra, 2005) Torrecuadrada-García-Lozano, S. (Soledad)
- Los inmigrantes no comunitarios en la Unión Europea(Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Navarra, 2000) Torrecuadrada-García-Lozano, S. (Soledad)
- Los derechos humanos de los hijos de los soldados alemanes tras la Segunda Guerra Mundial. El caso de Noruega(Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Navarra, 2019) Torrecuadrada-García-Lozano, S. (Soledad)The children of the German soldiers in occupied areas during the Second World War lived a difficult situation once the war was over. They were children who had to grow up with the stigma of being children of the enemy, which was accompanied that of their biological mothers who suffered for having chosen an enemy as a couple (if this was the case). A particular case in point is Norway, where the fate of these children was combined with that of the children born out of the Lebensborn Project since in Norway almost as many racial purification centers were opened as in Germany. All of them grew up with the rejection of the societies in which they lived that saw in them an extension of their parents, who had been their occupier, giving them a treatment very different from the one they deserved because of their age. Some of these children turned to the European Court of Human Rights ten years ago with a complaint against Norway, considering themselves to be victims of the breach of the European Convention by this state.