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María del Carmen, Ana María, and Guillermo Cabanellas de las Cuevas (children) Guillermo Cabanellas de Torres ( Melilla , 25 June 1911– Buenos Aires , 13 April 1983) was a Spanish historian , labor lawyer , publisher , and lexicographer who carried out his work in Spain, Paraguay, and Argentina.
Las cabañuelas is practiced throughout Mexico, South America, including the Caribbean, and even in parts of Africa that were previously territories of Spain. In Spain, the self-procaliamed expert cabañuelistas are organized at the Asociación Cultural Española de cabañuelas y Astrometeorología (ACECA).
Darío Cabanelas Rodríguez (20 December 1916 – 18 September 1992) was a Spanish Arabist whose work influenced Arab studies in the 20th century. He was born and died in Trasalba, Ourense , Spain .
Diccionario de Derecho Administrativo, Iustel, Madrid, 2005. 2 vols., 2.736 páginas; Comentarios a las Leyes de Fundaciones y mecenazgo (Dir. Junto con M. Cruz Amorós y R. de Lorenzo García), Iustel, Madrid, 2005. El problema de la vertebración del Estado en España (Del siglo XVIII al siglo XXI), Iustel, 2006. 384 págs. [2]
Guillermo Cabanellas de Torres, in his Compendio de Derecho Laboral, elaborates on disguised dismissal. He explains that the employer, by violating legal and contractual duties, puts the employee in a position where continuing to work is untenable due to moral and economic damage.
Delia Revoredo de Mur: [194] First female appointed as a Judge of the Constitutional Court of Peru; Mónica Feria Tinta: [195] First Peruvian-born and Latin American (female) lawyer called to the Bar of England and Wales; Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza: [196] First Peruvian (female) elected as a Judge of the International Criminal Court (2017)
The Breve diccionario etimológico de la lengua castellana (in English, Brief etymological dictionary of the Spanish language) is an etymological dictionary compiled by the Catalan philologist Joan Corominas (1905–1997), and first published in 1961—with revised editions in 1967, 1973, 1993, and 2008—by Gredos in Madrid.
The Junta de Defensa Nacional (English: National Defense Junta) was a military junta which governed the territories held by the Nationalist faction of the Spanish Civil War from July to September 1936. The junta's president was Miguel Cabanellas and its head of state was Francisco Franco.