Privacy Rights/History/Country sources/Cape Verde: Difference between revisions

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|pageLevel=Breakout
|pageLevel=Breakout
|breakout=Cape Verde
|breakout=Cape Verde
|contents=Article 33 makes violations of privacy inadmissible in court, while Article 38 grants the right to “personal identity, to civil rights, to a name, honor, and reputation, and to personal and family privacy”. Article 41 extends privacy rights to correspondence, and Article 42 extends it to electronic data privacy (Constitute Project, “Cape Verde [[Probable year::1980]]  rev. [[Probable year::1992]]” ).
|contents=Article 33 makes violations of privacy inadmissible in court, while Article 38 grants the right to “personal identity, to civil rights, to a name, honor, and reputation, and to personal and family privacy”. Article 41 extends privacy rights to correspondence, and Article 42 extends it to electronic data privacy (Constitute Project, “Cape Verde [[Probable year:: 1980]]  rev. [[Probable year:: 1992]]” ).


https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Cape_Verde_[[Probable year::1992]]? lang=en
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Cape_Verde_[[Probable year:: 1992]]? lang=en




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Revision as of 22:09, 28 December 2022

What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?

Cape Verde

Article 33 makes violations of privacy inadmissible in court, while Article 38 grants the right to “personal identity, to civil rights, to a name, honor, and reputation, and to personal and family privacy”. Article 41 extends privacy rights to correspondence, and Article 42 extends it to electronic data privacy (Constitute Project, “Cape Verde 1980 rev. 1992” ).

https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Cape_Verde_1992? lang=en