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Note: This includes documents of administrative nature ("TUPA" standard) or issued from State authorities (see COM:Peru, Government section). Other formats of government acts in open data portals are also under free licenses with some conditions such as right of attribution or share-alike (see also contents suitable for free reproduction).
The current constitution, enacted on 31 December 1993, is Peru's fifth in the 20th century and replaced the 1979 Constitution. [1] The Constitution was drafted by the Democratic Constituent Congress that was convened by President Alberto Fujimori during the Peruvian Constitutional Crisis of 1992 that followed his 1992 dissolution of Congress ...
Elections for the Democratic Constituent Congress were held in Peru on 22 November 1992, [1] following a self-coup (known as the "autogolpe") by President Alberto Fujimori on 5 April. [2] The elections were boycotted by the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance , the second largest party in the Chamber of Deputies, and were won by Fujimori's ...
There is a College of Advocates of Lima (Spanish: Colegio de Abogados de Lima). [4] since 1811. [5]The college has been equated with a bar association. [6] Legislation relevant to advocates has included decrees of 6 April 1837, 31 March 1838, 27 April 1848, and laws of 8 January 1848 and 21 October 1851.
The 1992 Peruvian self-coup, sometimes known as the Fujimorazo, [1] [2] was performed in Peru in 1992 after President Alberto Fujimori dissolved the Congress as well as the judiciary and assumed full legislative and judicial powers.
The Peruvian State, which is conceptually the Peruvian nation legally organized, is the entity that holds the government in the Republic of Peru.The state's structure is defined in the Constitution of Peru approved by referendum and promulgated in late 1993 and in force since January 1, 1994.
After the self-coup of April 5, 1992, on April 9, 1992, the Congress unconstitutionally dissolved by Fujimori met at the home of the deputy from the Christian People's Party Lourdes Flores Nano (99 deputies and 36 senators) and declared the permanent moral incapacity of Alberto Fujimori and with it the vacancy of the Presidency of the Republic. [8]
The Democratic Constituent Congress (Spanish: Congreso Constituyente Democrático) was a Constituent Assembly created in Peru after the dissolution of Congress by President Alberto Fujimori in 1992. Its main purpose was to amend the Constitution of 1979.