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The Constitution of Uruguay (Constitución de la República Oriental del Uruguay) is the supreme law of Uruguay. Its first version was written in 1830 and its last amendment was made in 2004. Uruguay's first constitution was adopted in 1830, following the conclusion of the three-year-long Cisplatine War in which Argentina and Uruguay acted as a ...
The 1830 constitution has been regarded as Uruguay's most technically perfect charter. Heavily influenced by the thinking of the French and American revolutions, it divided the government among the executive, legislative, and judicial powers and established Uruguay as a unitary republic with a centralized form of government.
The legal system of Uruguay belongs to the Continental Law tradition. The basis for its public law is the 1967 Constitution, amended in 1989, 1994, 1996, and 2004. According to it, Uruguay is a democratic republic. There is a clear separation of functions, between the Executive Branch, the Legislative Branch and the Judicial Branch. [1]
Historia Uruguaya. Tomo 5 (in Spanish). Montevideo: Santillana. Nahum, Benjamín (1996). Manual de Historia del Uruguay. Tomo I: 1830-1903 (in Spanish). Montevideo: Ediciones de la Banda Oriental. ISBN 9974-1-0233-2. Pérez Pérez, Alberto (1997). Constitución de 1967 de la República Oriental del Uruguay (in Spanish). Montevideo: Fundación ...
The 1997 Constitution of Uruguay refers to the 1967 Constitution with amendments. Its actual name should be: the Constitution of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay , with the amendments as approved in popular plebiscites of 26 November 1989 , of 26 November 1994 , of 8 December 1996 , and of 31 October 2004 . [ 1 ]
As the culmination of an effort to reestablish the colegiado and the plural executive power, a fourth constitution was promulgated on January 25, 1952. It readopted José Batlle y Ordóñez 's original proposal for coparticipation by creating a nine-member colegiado , this time called the National Council of Government ( Consejo Nacional de ...
Uruguay is the Latin American country that receives the most tourists in relation to its population. In 2023, 3.8 million tourists entered Uruguay, of which the majority were Argentines and Brazilians, followed by Chileans, Paraguayans, Americans and Europeans of various nationalities.
The Civil Code of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay (Spanish: Código Civil de la República Oriental del Uruguay) is a systematic collection of Uruguayan laws designed to comprehensively deal with the core areas of private law such as for dealing with business and negligence lawsuits and practices.