Privacy Rights/History/Country sources/El Salvador: Difference between revisions
Import-sysop (talk | contribs) (transformed) |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
|question=Country sources | |question=Country sources | ||
|questionHeading=What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right? | |questionHeading=What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right? | ||
|breakout=El Salvador | |||
|pageLevel=Breakout | |pageLevel=Breakout | ||
|contents=Chapter 16, Section 77 of the 1841 Constitution of the State of Salvador reads: "Every Salvadorean has a right to be protected from inquisitions, compulsory search, and restraints, as regards his person, house, papers, family, and all his possessions." | |||
|contents= | |||
Article 2 of the [[Probable year:: 1983]] constitution explicitly protects the “right to honor, personal and family intimacy, and one’s own image.” Article 6 allows for free communication as long as it does not violate the private lives of others. Article 24 protects correspondence (Constitute Project, “El Salvador [[Probable year:: 1983]] rev. [[Probable year:: 2014]]” ). | |||
English translation of the Constitution of 1841. 218 (2010) "Chapter XVI: Declaration of the Rights, Duties, and Securities of the Nation, and of Salvadoreans in Particular," Political Constitution of the State of Salvador (1841): 218-222 | |||
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/El_Salvador_[[Probable year:: 2014]]? lang=en | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 10:54, 29 April 2024
What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?
El Salvador
Chapter 16, Section 77 of the 1841 Constitution of the State of Salvador reads: "Every Salvadorean has a right to be protected from inquisitions, compulsory search, and restraints, as regards his person, house, papers, family, and all his possessions."
Article 2 of the 1983 constitution explicitly protects the “right to honor, personal and family intimacy, and one’s own image.” Article 6 allows for free communication as long as it does not violate the private lives of others. Article 24 protects correspondence (Constitute Project, “El Salvador 1983 rev. 2014” ).
English translation of the Constitution of 1841. 218 (2010) "Chapter XVI: Declaration of the Rights, Duties, and Securities of the Nation, and of Salvadoreans in Particular," Political Constitution of the State of Salvador (1841): 218-222 https://constituteproject.org/constitution/El_Salvador_2014? lang=en