Juan Espindola (PhD, University of Michigan) is a researcher at the Institute for Philosophical Research at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. His research focuses on transitional justice, espionage, and artificial intelligence. He is the author of Atrocity without Punishment: A Political Theory of Leniency in Mexico's "War on Drugs" (Stanford University Press, 2026), Transitional Justice after German Reunification: Exposing Unofficial Collaborators (Cambridge University Press, 2015), and co-editor of Understanding Collaboration in Authoritarian and Armed Conflict Settings (Oxford University Press, 2022). His work has appeared in journals such as Ethics and International Affairs, Theoretical Criminology, Journal of Social Philosophy, Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, Res Publica, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Studies in Philosophy and Education, and others.
Moisés Vaca (PhD in Philosophy, University College London) is a researcher at the Institute for Philosophical Research at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). His work focuses on liberal egalitarianism and Rawlsian theory, including issues related to victims of historical injustice, minority cultures, women, the LGBT+ community, solidarity, public reason, and polarization. His work has been published in journals such as Bioethics, Crítica, Dianoia, Ethics and Global Politics, Hypatia, Latin American Journal of Political Philosophy, Res Publica, and others.