Symposium: Social Transformation in Colombia: Internally Displaced Persons and the Constitutional Court – A Landmark Case

Symposium: Social Transformation in Colombia: Internally Displaced Persons and the Constitutional Court – A Landmark Case

María-Dolores COLLAZOS

Since its introduction in 1991, the Constitutional Court of Colombia (hereinafter ‘the Court’) has distinguished itself as a competent defender of fundamental rights. Regionally, the Court is known for creating a large body of jurisprudence focused on supporting and expanding the range of individual rights…

Read More

Symposium: Contradicción de Tesis 293/2011 and the Constitutional Supremacy of International Human Rights Law

Symposium: Contradicción de Tesis 293/2011 and the Constitutional Supremacy of International Human Rights Law

Irene SPIGNO

With the landmark decision Contradicción de Tesis 293/2011, the Mexican Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation solved a conflict between two different jurisprudential criteria on the position international treaties on human rights have in the national legal order, recognizing them at a constitutional level.

Read More

Symposium: The Simón case—a decisive chapter in the Argentine struggle for a new beginning

Symposium: The Simón case—a decisive chapter in the Argentine struggle for a new beginning

Gisela FERRARI

The last military dictatorship (1976-1983) constituted a dark phase in the history of Argentina, leaving deep wounds in the social fabric of a country with an unstable relationship with democratic rule. The decision of the Supreme Court of Argentina in Simón (2005) revolutionized the constitutional landscape…

Read More

Symposium: Constitutional Identity in Transition? The Case on the Human Rights of the State

Symposium: Constitutional Identity in Transition? The Case on the Human Rights of the State

Diana CARRERA & Johanna FRÖHLICH

In 2012, the Ecuadorean National Undersecretary of Public Administration, with the support of the Office of the Presidency, filed a writ of amparo (“acción de protección”) against a local newspaper because it published an editorial containing allegedly false information on excessive expenditure on campaign advertising during the term of President Rafael Correa.

Read More

A Constitutional Telenovela: The Deepening Constitutional Crisis in Guatemala

A Constitutional Telenovela: The Deepening Constitutional Crisis in Guatemala

Carlos Arturo Villagrán SANDOVAL

In August 2017, I wrote about a potential constitutional crisis in Guatemala. A few years down the track, the situation has now reached a critical point. On 28 June 2020, the Guatemalan Congress filed a criminal suit against certain members of the Constitutional Court on the ground that the Court’s latest judgments are contrary to the Constitution.

Read More

The “Religion of Citizenship”: the Indian Citizenship Amendment Act 2019

The “Religion of Citizenship”: the Indian Citizenship Amendment Act 2019

Francesca RAIMONDO

On 12 December 2019 the Indian President gave assent to the Citizenship Amendment Bill, that assumed the status of Act (Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019, hereinafter the CAA), after the approval of the two branches of the Indian Parliament, the Lok Sabha (House of the People) and the Rajya Sabha (Council of the States).

Read More

NATO’S Aspirations in the Constitutional Preamble of Ukraine: Distorting Historical Roots of the Constitution or Reflecting Societal Changes?

NATO’S Aspirations in the Constitutional Preamble of Ukraine: Distorting Historical Roots of the Constitution or Reflecting Societal Changes?

Justin FROSINI & Viktoriia LAPA

On 27 March 2020 the Republic of North Macedonia acceded to NATO and became its 30th Member State. With similar aspirations to North Macedonia, other states like Ukraine also hope to accede to NATO. What is more, they have decided to set it in stone by making an explicit reference to their NATO (and also EU) aspirations in the Constitution…

Read More

The Militarized Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic in the Philippines: An Escalating Threat to Human Rights

The Militarized Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic in the Philippines: An Escalating Threat to Human Rights

Michael Henry YUSINGCO & Angelika Lourdes PIZARRO

The response of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to the COVID-19 pandemic was to implement emergency measures under the authority of two statutes. The first one was the Mandatory Reporting of Notifiable Diseases and Health Events of Public Health Concern Act of 2018 which empowers the President to declare a state of public health emergency and mobilize governmental and nongovernmental agencies to respond to the threat.

Read More

North Macedonian Secularism to the Test in Times of COVID-19

North Macedonian Secularism to the Test in Times of COVID-19

Dorjana Bojanovska POPOVSKA

The North Macedonian constitution is a liberal constitution. It includes a broad protection of rights, including equality before the law (Article 9), freedom of belief, conscience and thought (Article 16) its manifestation (Article 19), etc. Article 19 further entrenches the institutional separation between the state and faith organizations…

Read More