González Vaz, Carmen2025-09-102025-09-102025https://hdl.handle.net/10272/27054En 2015, se introdujo en el ordenamiento jurídico español la conocida como “prisión permanente revisable” atendiendo al clamor de la sociedad derivado del rechazo a recientes crímenes mediáticos. A pesar de que tuvo una buena acogida en la sociedad, una gran parte de la doctrina penal enseguida señaló su incompatibilidad con el mandato constitucional de la finalidad resocializadora de la pena.In 2015, the socalled “revisable life imprisonment” was introduced into the Spanish legal system in response to the clamor that society had been demanding in rejection of recent media crimes. However, and even though it was well received by society, a large part of criminal doctrine immediately pointed out its incompatibility with the constitutional mandate of the resocializing purpose of the sentence.spaAttribution 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ConstitucionalidadEstado de derechoPrisión permanente revisableResocializaciónTribunal Europeo de Derechos HumanosConstitutionalityRule of lawLife imprisonmentResocializationEuropean Court of Human RightsLa constitucionalidad de la prisión permanente revisable a debate a través de la doctrina del Tribunal Europeo de Derechos Humanos y del Tribunal Constitucional españolThe Constitutionality of the Revisable Life Imprisonment under Debate Through the Doctrine of the European Court of Human Rights and the Spanish Constitutional Courtjournal articleopen access56 Ciencias Jurídicas y Derecho