El presidente no personifica a la nación. Un estudio sobre su naturaleza representativa

Translated title of the contribution: The president does not personify the nation. Or a study on its representative nature

Eduardo Martín Acosta Yparraguirre*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The idea of the personification of the Nation as typical of the presidential institution has been installed in Peru from the last three constitutions (1933, 1979 and 1993), supported by a general appreciation that attributes to it a declarative character, innocuousness or tradition and which has normalized the sentence to the point of critical silence. However, it is not only rare to the institution, but it is also pernicious to the correct understanding of democratic representation, since it is more typical of absolute monarchies and even in its original United States version, in which presidential power continues to expand, this concept does not appear and neither does it appear in Latin American constitutionalisms, which reveals not only its inconsistency, but also its noxiousness for the republican system.

Translated title of the contributionThe president does not personify the nation. Or a study on its representative nature
Original languageSpanish
Article numbere17658
JournalCuestiones Constitucionales
Volume25
Issue number51
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

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