El derecho de petición | | UPV

Title: The Right to Petition Description: Study of the right to petition provided for in the Constitution (Article 29) and developed by Organic Law 4/2001. Cabedo Mallol, V. (2011). The Right to Petition. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/12962 Automatic description: This video explains the right to petition in the 1978 Constitution, regulated in Article 29, which closes the section on fundamental rights. This right allows citizens to submit individual or collective petitions in writing, as established by law. However, members of the armed forces or bodies with military discipline may only exercise it individually. The right to petition was not legislatively developed until 2001, with the Organic Law that regulates it in accordance with constitutional doctrine. This law extends this right to natural persons and legal entities, regardless of their nationality, and stipulates that the petition must be formalized in writing, which must include the identity and nationality of the applicant, a means of notification, and the purpose and recipient of the petition. The law establishes that the recipient of the petition may be any authority, agency, or public administration competent for the matter raised. It concludes with a practice aimed at investigating the legal protection regime of this fundamental right and what remedies citizens have if their petition is not granted. Author: Cabedo Mallol Vicente Universitat Politècnica de València UPV: https://www.upv.es More videos at:    / valenciaupv   Access our MOOCs: https://upvx.es #Constitution #Right to Petition #CONSTITUTIONAL LAW