Freedom of Association/History/Country sources/Guinea-Bissau: Difference between revisions

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|breakout=Guinea-Bissau
|breakout=Guinea-Bissau
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|contents=The first assertion of the right to association was in the May 11, 1991 amendments to the Guinea-Bisseau Constitution. The right can be found in Title II, Article 44 (“Constitutional Documents Available for the Republic of Guinea-Bissau”, 1991).
|contents=Guinea-Bissau’s 1973 Constitution groups freedom of opinion, assembly, association, demonstration, and religion together in Article 17.


1991. Constitutional Documents Available for the Republic of Guinea-Bissau. May 11. https://constitutionnet.org/sites/default/files/Guinea-Bissau%20Constitution.pdf.
References:
 
Guinea-Bissau 1973 Constitution: https://heinonline-org.mutex.gmu.edu/HOL/COWShow?collection=cow&cow_id=182Guinea-Bissau’s second Constitution, created in 1973, groups freedom of opinion, assembly, association, demonstration, and religion together in Article 17.
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Latest revision as of 02:34, 1 September 2024

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

Guinea-Bissau

Guinea-Bissau’s 1973 Constitution groups freedom of opinion, assembly, association, demonstration, and religion together in Article 17.

References:

Guinea-Bissau 1973 Constitution: https://heinonline-org.mutex.gmu.edu/HOL/COWShow?collection=cow&cow_id=182Guinea-Bissau’s second Constitution, created in 1973, groups freedom of opinion, assembly, association, demonstration, and religion together in Article 17.