Personally, I find the whole discussion in this thread rather puzzling.
It has already been established that it is a legitimate titulo propio degree in Spain. ENEB has the status of an independent collaborating centre that works with a recognized Spanish university. You can verify that by contacting the university. A titulo propio is not a an official state-recognized degree in Spain. Why would you expect this university's-own degree award to be seen as equivalent to a government-recognized/accredited Master's degree in another country? It doesn't have that status in Spain! Secondly, why would WES be some kind of an arbiter in this dispute? Their evaluation is irrelevant to the status of this degree in Spain. There are thousands of credential evaluation agencies in the U.S. WES is just a single agency under the umbrella of the much larger NACES membership association. AICE is another professional membership association with full recognition by the U.S. Dept. of Education. Again, why the constant focus on WES?
If this degree doesn't give you access to doctoral studies in Spain, why would you even expect it to give you access to such studies (which a positive WES evaluation would effectively do) in the United States? This is a legitimate Master's degree, but it isn't equivalent to a state recognized degree in Spain. It's a legal professional university's-own Master's degree award with no connection to state-recognized degrees. It probably won't be seen as equivalent to a regionally accredited degree. Then again, it won't be an issue unless you're desperately trying to make this degree into something that it wasn't meant to be in the first place. :-)
It has already been established that it is a legitimate titulo propio degree in Spain. ENEB has the status of an independent collaborating centre that works with a recognized Spanish university. You can verify that by contacting the university. A titulo propio is not a an official state-recognized degree in Spain. Why would you expect this university's-own degree award to be seen as equivalent to a government-recognized/accredited Master's degree in another country? It doesn't have that status in Spain! Secondly, why would WES be some kind of an arbiter in this dispute? Their evaluation is irrelevant to the status of this degree in Spain. There are thousands of credential evaluation agencies in the U.S. WES is just a single agency under the umbrella of the much larger NACES membership association. AICE is another professional membership association with full recognition by the U.S. Dept. of Education. Again, why the constant focus on WES?
If this degree doesn't give you access to doctoral studies in Spain, why would you even expect it to give you access to such studies (which a positive WES evaluation would effectively do) in the United States? This is a legitimate Master's degree, but it isn't equivalent to a state recognized degree in Spain. It's a legal professional university's-own Master's degree award with no connection to state-recognized degrees. It probably won't be seen as equivalent to a regionally accredited degree. Then again, it won't be an issue unless you're desperately trying to make this degree into something that it wasn't meant to be in the first place. :-)