A leap from the classroom to the courts
Rector Dámaso Anaya did not go to Mexico City just to sign papers. He went to open a door. The one that separates classroom theories from the complex reality of justice. In an act led by the presiding judge of the Judicial Disciplinary Court, Celia Maya García, and the head of the ANUIES, Luis González Placencia, an agreement was sealed that is much more than bureaucracy.
It is a concrete opportunity. Social service, professional practices and specialized training will now have a clear destination for future UAT lawyers: the Judicial Branch of the Federation.
“This instrument offers opportunities for linking universities with the Judiciary,” they highlighted during the signing at the ANUIES Innovation Center.
Beyond the protocol, a real change
Here’s what really matters: Anaya announced that the UAT Law Schools will be integrated into the project. This is not a speech. It means that students will stop being spectators and become actors in real scenarios of public ethics and justice.
Imagine it. Instead of just reading about disciplinary processes, they will be able to experience them from the inside. They will contribute to the training of professionals who not only know the laws, but have experienced the responsibility that comes with applying them.
For Anaya and the UAT, this agreement is a key piece. One more national alliance to consolidate an academic model that promises real social impact. Train not only brilliant lawyers, but citizens committed to transparency and legality from day one.
The political theater is sometimes filled with noise. But in silence, with agreements like this, is where the future is built. The professionals who tomorrow will defend the integrity of the system are being trained. And that, friends, is news worth telling.




