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  2. Odilia Castro Hidalgo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odilia_Castro_Hidalgo

    María Odilia Castro Hidalgo (1908–1999) was a Costa Rican teacher, communist and feminist. She founded the parent organization which would become the National Association of Educators. Exiled for her communist activities after the Costa Rican Civil War, Castro later returned and founded several social welfare programs. She taught for 32 ...

  3. Human rights in Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rights_in_Costa_Rica

    Costa Rica ranks third in the developing nations for gender equality. [1] Marriage is usually consensual, on the basis on love, with divorces legal and usually favouring women in terms of division of assets and custody of children. [7] Free, compulsory primary and secondary education is provided to all women in Costa Rica. [7]

  4. Category:Costa Rican activists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Costa_Rican_activists

    Costa Rican women activists (29 P) A. Costa Rican anti-same-sex-marriage activists (2 P) E. Costa Rican environmentalists (1 C, 5 P) F. Costa Rican feminists (1 C, 16 ...

  5. LGBTQ rights in Costa Rica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBTQ_rights_in_Costa_Rica

    The Costa Rican Government announced that it would apply the rulings in the following months. [3] [4] In August 2018, the Costa Rican Supreme Court ruled against the country's same-sex marriage ban, and gave the Legislative Assembly 18 months to reform the law accordingly, otherwise the ban would be abolished automatically. Same-sex marriage ...

  6. Ana Helena Chacón - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ana_Helena_Chacón

    Ana Helena Chacón Echeverría is a Costa Rica politician, who served as the nation's 2nd Vice President, under Luis Guillermo Solís 2014–2018, and as Ambassador in Spain, under Carlos Alvarado. Her political career is dedicated to issues of feminism , human rights , and public health policy.

  7. Costa Rican nationality law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costa_Rican_nationality_law

    A woman who had gained Costa Rican nationality through marriage could relinquish it if the marriage terminated and she acquired nationality elsewhere. [24] Under the Naturalization Law of 1889, minor children of a foreign father who naturalized, or chose to relinquish Costa Rican nationality, automatically derived his new nationality.

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