Chile in course to Abolitionism. The next step

Main Article Content

Antonio Muñoz Aunión

Abstract

In the year 2001, the Republic of Chile abolished the death penalty of the systems of ordinary penalties by Law n.19.734, the past month of April after serving 13 years of this important date for the Chilean society and for the international community as a whole given that seven years later its commitment to international law and abolitionism was accentuated with the ratification of the Second Optional Protocol of 1989 to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and at the regional level, of the Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights to the abolition of the death penalty of 1990, converting this form into the country number one hundred and eight that did it.

Article Details

How to Cite
Muñoz Aunión, A. (2015). Chile in course to Abolitionism. The next step. Global Law. Law and Justice Studies, 1(1), 151–160. https://doi.org/10.32870/dgedj.v0i1.46
Section
Comparative law
Author Biography

Antonio Muñoz Aunión, Universidad de Guadalajara

Master in Law of the European Union for the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Researcherand Professor at the Universidad de Tamaulipas

References

Sin citas.