Yolanda's Law
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Yolanda's Law
Yolanda's Law () is a national law of Argentina (Law 27.592) requiring mandatory environmental training for every member of the executive, legislative and judiciary branches of government. It was fully sanctioned and published in the ''Boletín Oficial de la República Argentina, Official Bulletin of the Argentine Republic'' on 15 December 2020.Official Gazette of the Argentina Republic
15 December 2020
It is an List of legislation named for a person, eponymous law named after chemist Yolanda Ortiz (chemist), Yolanda Ortiz, the first Secretary of Natural Resources and Human Environment of Argentina, appointed by then-president Juan Perón in 1973, who died in 2019 at the age of 94. The law specifies that this mandatory training must include information about Climate change in A ...
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Law Of Argentina
The Legal system of Argentina is a civil law legal system. The pillar of the civil system is the Constitution of Argentina (1853). The Argentine Constitution of 1853 was an attempt to unite the unstable and young country of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata under a single law, creating as well the different organisms needed to run a country. This constitution was finally approved after failed attempts in 1813 (see Assembly of 1813), 1819 and 1831 ( Pacto Federal). Structure of the Law in Argentina ; Constitution of Argentina :# Bill of Rights :# Form of Government :# Delegation of Powers to the National :# Precedence of Laws - International Treaties :# Provincial Constitutions ; Civil Code of Argentina The first Civil Code was written by Argentine jurist Dalmacio Vélez Sársfield, and came into effect on January 1, 1871 and remained law until 1 August 2015, when it was replaced by a new Civil and Commercial Code - ''Código Civil y Comercial de la Nación''. ...
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