Privacy Rights/History/Country sources/El Salvador: Difference between revisions
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|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]]” ). | |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]]” ). | ||
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/El_Salvador_[[Probable year::2014]]? lang=en | https://constituteproject.org/constitution/El_Salvador_[[Probable year:: 2014]]? lang=en | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 22:12, 28 December 2022
What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?
El Salvador
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” ).
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/El_Salvador_2014? lang=en