Mexican_Constitution_of_1917 Mexican_Constitution_of_1917

Mexican Constitution of 1917 - Definition and Overview

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The 1917 Constitution of Mexico is the present constitution of Mexico.

Mexico has had 3 fully-fledged, operational constitutions: those enacted in 1824, 1857, and 1917. The 1917 Constitution was drafted in Santiago de Querétaro during the Mexican Revolution.

The Constitution was approved by the Constitutional Congress on February 5, 1917, with Venustiano Carranza serving as the first president under its terms.

Día de la Constitución (Constitution Day) on February 5 is an annual Fiestas Patrias or public holiday in Mexico to commemorate the promulgation of the Constitution.

Contents

Articles of the Constitution

Most of the original articles are still in force but have been heavily amended.

The main articles of Mexican Constitution are: 3, 27, 123 and 130.

Article 3 covers the matter of education in Mexico, and its main principle is that all of the education given by the State is to be free and unreligious.

Article 27 states that all of the land in the country is originally the property of the Nation, who can give the control of it to particulars, constituting so the private property with several restrictions, such as that foreign citizens cannot own land within 100 km of the borders or 50 km of the sea, that an area of land next to the coast is federal property which cannot be sold to particulars, and that the Nation is the only one who can control, extract, and process petroleum and its derivatives.

Article 127 covers the rights of workers, including the 8-hour daily work time, the right to go on strike, the right to a day's rest per week, and the right to a proper indemnization in case of unjustified termination of the working relationship on the part of the employer.

Article 130 states that Church and State are to remain separated, and that the Church has no legal personality among other regulation for the behavior of the priests.

The Article 18 Crisis

From the perspective of legal scholars outside Mexico (especially those in the USA), the most troubling aspect of the current 1917 Constitution is Article 18, which covers the rights of the accused and the guilty. The problem with Article 18 is that it recognizes only "social readaptation" (what most people would call rehabilitation) as the primary goal of incarceration. This limited view of incarceration (which Mexico happens to share with most European countries) fails to recognize that according to thinking prevalent in the USA, there may be other sensible reasons for incarcerating criminals, such as retribution, deterrence and segregation from the general population.

The reason Article 18 has become an object of concern outside of Mexico is that the Mexican Supreme Court ruled in October 2001 that life imprisonment constitutes cruel and unusual punishment within the meaning of Article 22, partially because it fails to allow for the possibility of rehabilitation as required by Article 18. In turn, Mexico will not allow criminal suspects to be extradited unless the receiving country can guarantee that the defendant will not receive a life sentence. But that can be difficult, since most U.S. states provide for life sentences for the felonies for which they will go to the trouble of pursuing extradition proceedings. The effective legal result of the Supreme Court's ruling is that people can commit heinous crimes in their home countries and flee to Mexico and escape the long arm of the law.

The concrete effects of the ruling are already evident; over 70% of the outstanding felony warrants in California today are for fugitives thought to be in Mexico.

See also

External links

Example Usage of Constitution

psvallely: ON THIS DAY IN 1791-BILL OF RIGHTS' TEN AMENDMENTS BECAME PART OF THE US Constitution
Dawg_1: We must stand together as nation and protect what our forefathers bled for. The Constitution of these United States.
johnoxendine: A Constitution of Government once changed from Freedom, can never be restored. Liberty, once lost, is lost forever - John Adams
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