Revista Derecho del Estado (Apr 2022)

Constitutional Dismemberment in Latin America

  • Richard Albert,
  • Juliano Zaiden Benvindo,
  • Milton César Jiménez Ramírez,
  • Cristian Villalonga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18601/01229893.n52.04
Journal volume & issue
no. 52

Abstract

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Some constitutional changes are constitutional amendments in name alone. These unusual constitutional changes dismantle the basic structure of the constitution while at the same time building a new foundation rooted in principles contrary to the old. They are self-conscious efforts to repudiate the essential characteristics of the constitution and to destroy its foundations. We should not understand changes on this scale as mere amendments. They are better understood as constitutional dismemberments. These constitutional changes disassemble one or more of the constitution’s elemental parts by altering a fundamental right, a load-bearing structural design, or a core aspect of the identity of the constitution. In this article, we draw from three jurisdictions in Latin America—Brazil, Chile, and Colombia—to illustrate this phenomenon, to expose its variations, and to suggest that it entails serious implications.

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