Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Permanent Assembly for Human Rights (in Spanish, La Asamblea Permanente por los Derechos Humanos (APDH)) is an Argentine non-governmental human rights organization; founded in 1975. According to its official website the organization is the product of a "call from people coming from distinct areas: the church, politics, Human Rights ...
The Constitution of the Argentine Nation (Spanish: Constitución de la Nación Argentina) is the basic governing document of Argentina, and the primary source of existing law in Argentina. Its first version was written in 1853 by a constitutional assembly which gathered in Santa Fe ; the doctrinal basis was taken in part from the United States ...
El peronismo y la Constitución de 1949 en la crisis de legitimidad argentina. Vol. Anales. Academia Nacional de Ciencias Morales y Políticas. (Artículo completo) consultado 29-abr-2006. VANOSSI, Jorge Reinaldo (1994). El Estado de Derecho en el Constitucionalismo Social. Buenos Aires: EUDEBA. VANOSSI, Jorge Reinaldo (2005). La Constitución ...
Undersecretariat of Access to Justice (Subsecretaría de Acceso a la Justicia) Undersecretariat of Relations with the Judiciary and Academia (Subsecretaría de Relaciones con el Poder Judicial y la Comunidad Académica) Secretariat of Human Rights (Secretaría de Derechos Humanos)
National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (Spanish: Comisión Nacional sobre la Desaparición de Personas, CONADEP) was an Argentine organization created by President Raúl Alfonsín on 15 December 1983, shortly after his inauguration, to investigate the fate of the desaparecidos (victims of forced disappearance) and other human rights violations (see: Dirty War) performed during the ...
Some universally recognised rights that are seen as fundamental, i.e., contained in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the U.N. International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, or the U.N. International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, include the following:
In 1926, Argentina revised its Civil Code through Law 11.357 removing the marital authority provision for husbands and expanding women's civil rights. According to the Federal Chamber in Buenos Aires, until the code revision a married woman had technically lost her nationality, but after the change her nationality was independent of her husband ...
Argentina is a multiethnic society, home to people of various ethnic, racial, religious, denomination, and national origins, with the majority of the population made up of Old World immigrants and their descendants. [20] [21] [22] As a result, Argentines do not equate their nationality with ethnicity, but with citizenship and allegiance to ...