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LEGAL SYSTEM OF ARGENTINA

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Federal country with three levels of state ... Argentina is a federation with a bicameral Parliament, known as the National Congress ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LEGAL SYSTEM OF ARGENTINA


1
LEGAL SYSTEM OF ARGENTINA
2
OVERVIEW
3
BRIEF HISTORY
  • Peron
  • Dirty War
  • Return to democracy
  • 1990s
  • Economic crisis
  • Recovery

4
ORGANIC CONSTITUTION
  • 1949 Constitutional Convention
  • 1994 Reforms

5
THE CONSTITUTION
  • National Constitution Constitución de la Nación
    Argentina
  • Federal country with three levels of state
  • Based on the republican doctrine of the division
    of powers into three different areas executive,
    legislative and judicial

6
FEDERAL SYSTEM
  • Argentina is a federation with a bicameral
    Parliament, known as the National Congress
  • The National Congress is comprised of a lower
    house, called the Chamber of Deputies, and an
    upper house, called the Senate

7
THE PRESIDENT
  • The federal state is ruled by a presidential
    system
  • President is the head of both the state and the
    federal government
  • Elected by direct universal suffrage every four
    years
  • Appoints his ministers and the Chief of Staff,
    and is involved in all administrative issues, in
    addition to being politically responsible for the
    government

8
CONGRESS
  • A Congress controls the Legislative Power
  • It consists of a Senate and a House of
    Representatives (Cámara de Diputados)
  • President has the right to veto the laws passed
    by Congress unless it insists with a special
    majority

9
LEGISLATIVE POWER
  • The legislative power is complemented by two
    special bodies, or offices, with specific powers
  • Auditor General
  • Ombudsman (the peoples defendant), in charge of
    protecting and defending human rights and other
    rights recognized by the Constitution

10
HIERARCHY OF LAWS
  • National Constitution
  • Preamble
  • Section 1
  • Section 2
  • International agreements
  • Federal Laws

11
PROVINCES
  • Each province has its own legislation, including
    provincial constitutions, laws and resolutions
  • Local legislation cannot violate any of the
    individual rights protected by the National
    Constitution

12
Overview of Argentine Legal System
  • Mixture of US and Western European legal systems
  • Civil Law Country
  • Inquisitorial
  • Detailed Codes
  • There are 23 provinces and the Federal Capital
    (Buenos Aires).  The 23 provinces are autonomous,
    but not as autonomous as the states in the United
    States system of government. 
  • Three main political parties in Argentina
  • Two court systems, the Federal Court System and
    the Provincial Court System
  • A Civil Code governs Civil Law, and a Criminal
    Code governs Criminal Law. 
  • No jury trials in Argentina. 
  • The judge plays an important and active role in
    the Argentine Legal System.  Human Rights
    violations were a problem for Argentina in the
    past, but the current government generally has a
    good track record on human rights

13
COURT SYSTEM
  • The National Judicial Power
  • The judicial powers of the provinces
  • The territory of each province is the
    jurisdiction of each provincial judicial power
  • The National Judicial Power has jurisdiction over
    the entire territory of the Argentine Republic
    and the Federal Capital
  • From the territorial point of view, the
    Provincial and the Federal Justice overlap in
    each province

14
POLITICAL PARTIES
  • There are 22 political parties in the National
    Congress
  • Peronists or Justicialist Party (Partido
    Justicialista-PJ)
  • Radical Civic Union (Union Civica Radical-UCR),
  • Front for a Country in Solidarity (Frente de Pais
    Solidario)

15
CIVIL CODE
  • Enacted in 1871 by Argentina's Congress
  • Encompasses all matters concerning
  • Argreements
  • Obligations
  • Property
  • Domestic law
  • Successions   

16
CIVIL COURTS
  • Decides civil issues
  • A judge decides all civil cases
  • Judges at the trial level court usually
    specialize in special areas- family law, property
    law, business law, juvenile law, or bankruptcy
    law

17
APPEALS
  • The losing party may make an appeal to the
    second-level court, the Civil Court of Appeal
    (Camaras Civiles de Apelacion)
  • The Civil Court of Appeal consists of three
    judges who must come to a conclusion by a
    majority (at least two)
  • The moving party must submit a written brief in
    support of their appeal

18
SUPREME COURT
  • A party may appeal to the Supreme Court or
    Provincial Supreme Court/Superior Tribunal of
    Justice in limited circumstances
  • This appeal procedure is called revocation
    (casacion)

19
CRIMINAL LAW
  • Criminal matters are decided in Criminal Courts
    (Camaras del Crimen)
  • Two Stages
  • In criminal courts, judges at the trial level
    court are called criminal or instruction judges
  • Criminal Courts have a Court Prosecutor (Fiscal
    de Camara)
  • The prosecutor plays an important role in the
    provincial criminal court system.  In some
    provinces, the judge investigates the case, and
    in other provinces, the prosecutor investigates
    the case along with the judge

20
HUMAN RIGHTS LAW
  • The Constitution expressly provides for
    fundamental human rights such as equality before
    the law, personal liberty, freedom of expression,
    peaceful assembly, and the right to private
    property
  • Argentina is a member of the American Convention
    on Human Rights and accepts the jurisdiction of
    the Inter-American Court on Human Rights. 
    Argentina has ratified the Rome Treaty and is a
    member of the International Criminal Court. 
    Argentina has not accepted compulsory
    International Court of Justice jurisdiction

21
JURISPRUDENCE
  • In Argentina, codification of law has not allowed
    jurisprudence to reach the same significance as
    it has in the US
  • Precedents carefully prepared for decades are
    sometimes made useless in a day by a Congress law
    that states the opposite, and that legal
    provision, as long as judges do not believe that
    it breaches the National Constitution, is
    considered mandatory

22
FORM OF GOVERNMENT
  • Democratic government in the
  • Representative,
  • Republican, and
  • Federal form
  • The nation adopts this form of government as
    established by the National Constitution, passed
    on 1853
  • Modification in 1860

23
TREATY MAKING POWERS
  • NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
  • PROVINCES

24
DO INTERNATIONAL TREATIES HAVE AN EFFECT ON THE
LAW?
  • In 2001, the CEDAW Optional Protocol was sent to
    the Senate to be ratified by law
  • On April 30 of 2002 the Government sent a message
    to the Senate requesting not to ratify it
  • Despite the change in 1999 to the Penal Code
    Crimes against Sexual Integrity legal
    discriminatory rules still exist

25
NOT REALLY
  • Limited access to health care in general (public
    or private) due to the economic crisis and to the
    devaluation of the national currency
  • The increasing unemployment that has been
    occurring since 1994, meant the loss of the
    -health care coverage, and at the same time it
    worsened the services available
  • Social security institutions, like the Institute
    of Medical Care (IOMA), discriminate against
    women beneficiaries by not allowing them to
    include their husbands or partners
  • Although males and females beneficiaries
    contribute equally, men enjoy that benefit
    exclusively and this social security institution
    does not allow incorporation of homosexual male
    and female couples

26
PROBLEMS WITH ENFORCEMENT
  • There is a general lack of awareness about the
    legal framework for protecting disability rights
  • Most laws lack penalties for non-compliance, and
    some of them are not enforced

27
NEW POLITICS
  •  The Presidents wife, Christina Fernandez, is an
    ultra feminist (shes running for politics)
  • President Nestor Kirchner (elected in 2003),
    while professing belief in the Catholic faith,
    has often had a troubled relationship with the
    hierarchy of the Church. Kirchner belongs to the
    center-left of Peronism and has placed emphasis
    on certain progressive views that do not go well
    with some conservative Catholics

28
Supreme Court Recent Decisions
  • Ricardo Alberto Tufano Case

29
INTER-AMERICAN COURT
  • Argentina recognizes the competency of the Court
  • Recent disability law example

30
REVIEW OF THE LEGAL SYSTEM
  • Constitution of Argentina
  • Civil Code of Argentina
  • Argentine sources of law
  • Law
  • Case Law
  • Custom
  • General Principles of Law
  • Analogy
  • Equity
  • Moral

31
NUMEROUS SOURCES
  • WEBSITE INFORMATION http//student.maxwell.syr.ed
    u/catoomey/argentinian-disability-law/

32
DIFFICULTIES
  • Most information is in Spanish ONLY
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