Overview
Authstone College strives to bring together exceptional students and renowned lecturers from across the globe. We provide thorough preparation for university education and offer advanced courses aligned with our students' chosen degrees. As a full member of Woolf, we adhere to European Union standards, emphasizing excellence in education and preparing students for success in both academic and professional spheres.
Degrees
Master's Degrees
Dean
Andrés González-Watty
Lawyer and researcher at the Mexican Supreme Court of Justice (Centro de Estudios Constitucionales). Interested in the confluence of information technology and the Law.
Academic board
Fernando Galindo Cruz
Fernando Galindo obtained his Ph.D. in Philosophy at the University of Konstanz, Germany. The topic of his doctoral dissertation is praise and blame in Aristotle. He also holds an MA in Philosophy from the UNAM (National University of Mexico). Currently, he teaches Business Ethics at the Universidad Anahuac Mexico. He is also the Director of Crime Prevention at the Police Department of Toluca, Mexico.
https://anahuac.academia.edu/FernandoGalindo/CurriculumVitae
Andrés González-Watty
Lawyer and researcher at the Mexican Supreme Court of Justice (Centro de Estudios Constitucionales). Interested in the confluence of information technology and the Law.
Alberto Ignacio Vargas Pérez
Alberto I. Vargas is Director of Inner Institute (Mexico) and Vice-President of the Leonardo Polo Institute of Philosophy (USA). He holds a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Navarra (Spain), Master’s in Government and Organizational Culture (University of Navarra, Spain), Master’s in Education (Universidad Villanueva, Spain) and Master’s in Public Policy (EGAP, Tec de Monterrey, Mexico).
He is a researcher at IMEESDEN (Mexican Institute of Strategic Studies of the Ministry of National Defense), member of the National System of Researchers of Conacyt (Level 1) and of the Mexican Association of Philosophy. He is a visiting professor at Strathmore University (Kenya), Anahuac University (Mexico), Leidenhoven College (Netherlands), Universidad Santo Toribio de Mogrovejo (Perú), Universidad Hemisferios (Ecuador), Universidad de La Sabana (Colombia), Universidad Panamericana (México), Universidad Monteavila (Venezuela) and Universidad de Piura (Perú).
He is the author of the books "Genealogy of Fear: an Anthropological Study of Modernity" (Universidad de Navarra), "Being and Gift: an Anthropological Game Theory" (Sindéresis) and "Searching the Personal Body: Beyond Nature and Subjectivity" (NUN).
Central line of research The gift structure of man and transcendental anthropology.
Areas of specialization Philosophical anthropology, Theory of action, Philosophy of culture, Leonardo Polo.
Areas of interest Political philosophy, Organizational theory, Philosophy of the family, Gregory of Nyssa.
Faculty, instructors and professional experts
Fernando Galindo Cruz
Fernando Galindo obtained his Ph.D. in Philosophy at the University of Konstanz, Germany. The topic of his doctoral dissertation is praise and blame in Aristotle. He also holds an MA in Philosophy from the UNAM (National University of Mexico). Currently, he teaches Business Ethics at the Universidad Anahuac Mexico. He is also the Director of Crime Prevention at the Police Department of Toluca, Mexico.
https://anahuac.academia.edu/FernandoGalindo/CurriculumVitae
Frida von Bertrab Campuzano
I am a Mexican lawyer specialising in constitutional law, judicial reasoning, and the digital transformation of justice institutions. I currently work at Mexico’s Supreme Court, where I lead the monitoring of binding precedents and support projects aimed at strengthening access to legal knowledge across the country. Previously, in the chambers of Justice Javier Laynez, I developed an AI-assisted analytical framework that streamlined constitutional review and improved the organisation of case law. I earned my Bachelor of Laws from Universidad Panamericana, writing a thesis on due process and judicial impartiality. My work lies at the intersection of law and technology, and I am particularly interested in advancing responsible AI governance within public institutions.
Mary Alexandra Vela Mccarthy
No bio available.
Jaime Olaiz González
Jaime Olaiz-Gonzalez is Professor of Constitutional Theory, International Law, and American Jurisprudence at Universidad Panamericana Law School in Mexico City, where he has been in the faculty since 2002. Professor Olaiz-Gonzalez received his law degree from Universidad Panamericana and his J.S.D.’15 (Doctor of the Science of Law) and LL.M.’09 (Master of Laws) from Yale Law School. He is Visiting Professor at Fordham Law School and at St. Thomas University College of Law, in Miami, Florida. Professor Olaiz-Gonzalez was a Fulbright-García Robles Grantee. He was Fellow of the International Center for Transitional Justice and the Center of Human Rights of Universidad de Chile. He served as Member of the Committee of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights for the Diagnosis of the Human Rights' Situation in Mexico City. For the Spring 2024, Professor Olaiz was the Fulbright-García Robles Mexico Studies Chair at the Kellogg Institute for International Studies at the University of Notre Dame. In the Fall 2024, he was Visiting Resource Professor at the LLILAS Institute and the Constitutional Studies Program of the University of Texas at Austin.
From December 2014 through March 2017, he was Dean for the J.D. program at Universidad Panamericana Law School and in 2020 was appointed Vice Dean for International Programs. He was also Director of the master’s in government and public policy program at Universidad Panamericana. From 2017 to 2019, Professor Olaiz-Gonzalez served as General Legal Counsel for Normativity and Consulting of the Institute for the Protection of Bank Deposits (IPAB).
He teaches, researches, and publishes on constitutional change, political transformations, international law, human rights, legal education, transitional justice, and constitutional adjudication. Professor Olaiz-Gonzalez is member of the Sistema Nacional de Investigadores (S.N.I.), Level 1, since 2016, and of the International Society of Public Law (ICON-S), and the International Association of Constitutional Law (IACL).
David González Ginocchio
Monterrey, México, 1983. I have a PhD Philosophy (Universidad de Navarra) and specialize in Medieval Philosophy and moral psychology, with a particular interest in Aristotle, Scotus, and Suárez.
Jaime Moreno-Tejada
Jaime is a historical geographer with a background in history and anthropology. He has done fieldwork in South America and Southeast Asia. Jaime is currently teaching world regional geography at Liaoning Normal University-Missouri State University, College of International Business, China.
King's College London
Andrés González-Watty
Lawyer and researcher at the Mexican Supreme Court of Justice (Centro de Estudios Constitucionales). Interested in the confluence of information technology and the Law.
Armando David Rodríguez Maldonado
I am legal counsel with fifteen years of experience applying strategic intelligence to identify, analyze and address public law, regulatory and policy problems that may result in economic, political or institutional risks across both corporate and governmental sectors. Whether in government, the private sector, or academia, my professional experience has been grounded in the regulated sectors of the economy broadly, and in the energy industries in particular.
Throughout my career, I have served in various public roles within the Mexican public sector; particularly at the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Public Administration in the Executive Branch, as well as in the federal judiciary. I have also worked in the private sector as a senior associate at a law firm, where I led the regulated industries and policy practice. In addition, my professional development has been enriched by intensive research projects for academic institutions and consulting firms.
Today, having a multidisciplinary perspective is essential for developing a comprehensive understanding of the risks that may affect the objectives of public or private organizations operating in complex local and international environments, where geopolitical, economic, social, and technological variables interact simultaneously. Such perspectives also enable the anticipation and design of effective risk-management strategies.
Alberto Ignacio Vargas Pérez
Alberto I. Vargas is Director of Inner Institute (Mexico) and Vice-President of the Leonardo Polo Institute of Philosophy (USA). He holds a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Navarra (Spain), Master’s in Government and Organizational Culture (University of Navarra, Spain), Master’s in Education (Universidad Villanueva, Spain) and Master’s in Public Policy (EGAP, Tec de Monterrey, Mexico).
He is a researcher at IMEESDEN (Mexican Institute of Strategic Studies of the Ministry of National Defense), member of the National System of Researchers of Conacyt (Level 1) and of the Mexican Association of Philosophy. He is a visiting professor at Strathmore University (Kenya), Anahuac University (Mexico), Leidenhoven College (Netherlands), Universidad Santo Toribio de Mogrovejo (Perú), Universidad Hemisferios (Ecuador), Universidad de La Sabana (Colombia), Universidad Panamericana (México), Universidad Monteavila (Venezuela) and Universidad de Piura (Perú).
He is the author of the books "Genealogy of Fear: an Anthropological Study of Modernity" (Universidad de Navarra), "Being and Gift: an Anthropological Game Theory" (Sindéresis) and "Searching the Personal Body: Beyond Nature and Subjectivity" (NUN).
Central line of research The gift structure of man and transcendental anthropology.
Areas of specialization Philosophical anthropology, Theory of action, Philosophy of culture, Leonardo Polo.
Areas of interest Political philosophy, Organizational theory, Philosophy of the family, Gregory of Nyssa.