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ESTADO DE EXCEPCIÓN Y GOBERNABILIDAD EN MÉXICO.

Authors :
Parra, Ma. Concepción Delgado
Source :
Revista Reflexiones. 2011, Vol. 90 Issue 2, p165-176. 12p.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The sovereignty of a state is manifested in constitutional law which assists to suspend individual rights of its citizens under the rhetoric of protecting their rights suspended them. Mexico is no exception to this state logic. However, in this emerging area of legal annulment other modes of being-together implemented by citizens "denationalized" within the meaning of the loss of their rights in their country of origin, indicating new modes of political action arising from the blurring of the rights of modern citizenship. I propose to trace the footsteps of the state of emergency in history by identifying the features that are repeated over time and they survive to continue to endanger the balance between the need for an emergency law and respect for human rights in Mexico. Then I explores some elements of modern representative democracy that explain the fictional staged of governance implementation by the state of emergency. Concluding with the enunciation of some examples of what today we would identify with the emergence of citizen participation practices that emerged in a context of emergency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
Spanish
ISSN :
10211209
Volume :
90
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Revista Reflexiones
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
67415463