Article
English, Spanish
ID: <
oai:doaj.org/article:841dce475196472993cfb1f963d5f4e2>
·
DOI: <
10.18046/prec.v17.4382>
Abstract
En This article analyses the position of the State as a potential responsible for gender-based violence occurring in the domestic context, i.e. outside the traditional patterns of the human rights framework, in which it is generally responsible when it acts as a direct actor for the harm. The analysis of this hypothesis of State liability contributes to the debate on the new perspectives of administrative law, which makes it necessary to include a gender approach in the discipline in order to determine the possible responsibility of the State for not engaging in diligent behaviour in the prevention of gender-based violence.