Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.

On 2 July 2006, Bolivia held a national referendum about departamental autonomy as part of the process of state decentralization and as an institutional response to the dire political and social crisis. The inclusion in the constitution of figures such as referendum, constitutional assembly and citi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fernando Mayorga Ugarte.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de los Andes 2006-12-01
Series:Colombia Internacional
Subjects:
Online Access:http://colombiainternacional.uniandes.edu.co/view.php/100/1.php
id doaj-01ed632a242e4e4cb1f0a21bd7649cd3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-01ed632a242e4e4cb1f0a21bd7649cd32020-11-24T21:06:58ZengUniversidad de los AndesColombia Internacional0121-56121960-60042006-12-01645067Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.Fernando Mayorga Ugarte.On 2 July 2006, Bolivia held a national referendum about departamental autonomy as part of the process of state decentralization and as an institutional response to the dire political and social crisis. The inclusion in the constitution of figures such as referendum, constitutional assembly and citizen legislative initiation was the response to the social demands and unrest given under the framework of semi-direct democracy which allowed for an institutional solution to them. Even though the law that called for the referendum defines its national character, in several articles it states that a regime of departamental autonomy will apply immediately after the new Constitution is ratified in those departments where the referendum question was approved by a simple majority of the vote. This dual interpretation with regards to the mandatory nature of the results — at the national or the departamental level — is added to the debate about the nature of the autonomies.The party of the government, whose position won in the referendum and won a majority of the constitutional assembly, sketches a proposal that includes different versions of autonomy — indigenous, regional, provincial, cantonal, communal — that run counter, in some instances, to the departamental autonomies. In sum, the referendum on departamental autonomy, far from solving the problem, has transfered it to the constitutional assembly which puts at risk the democratic legitimacy of its decisions given that the new constitution must answer the demands of diverse political and social actors. Aside from these dynamics, this experience of citizen participation in the decisiom-making process is an example of the positive impact of an institutional reform in the strengthening of the democratic legitimacy and the efficacy of political institutions.http://colombiainternacional.uniandes.edu.co/view.php/100/1.phpBoliviaasamblea constituyentereferéndumautonomías departamentalesdescentralización
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fernando Mayorga Ugarte.
spellingShingle Fernando Mayorga Ugarte.
Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.
Colombia Internacional
Bolivia
asamblea constituyente
referéndum
autonomías departamentales
descentralización
author_facet Fernando Mayorga Ugarte.
author_sort Fernando Mayorga Ugarte.
title Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.
title_short Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.
title_full Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.
title_fullStr Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.
title_full_unstemmed Referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en Bolivia.
title_sort referéndum y asamblea constituyente: autonomías departamentales en bolivia.
publisher Universidad de los Andes
series Colombia Internacional
issn 0121-5612
1960-6004
publishDate 2006-12-01
description On 2 July 2006, Bolivia held a national referendum about departamental autonomy as part of the process of state decentralization and as an institutional response to the dire political and social crisis. The inclusion in the constitution of figures such as referendum, constitutional assembly and citizen legislative initiation was the response to the social demands and unrest given under the framework of semi-direct democracy which allowed for an institutional solution to them. Even though the law that called for the referendum defines its national character, in several articles it states that a regime of departamental autonomy will apply immediately after the new Constitution is ratified in those departments where the referendum question was approved by a simple majority of the vote. This dual interpretation with regards to the mandatory nature of the results — at the national or the departamental level — is added to the debate about the nature of the autonomies.The party of the government, whose position won in the referendum and won a majority of the constitutional assembly, sketches a proposal that includes different versions of autonomy — indigenous, regional, provincial, cantonal, communal — that run counter, in some instances, to the departamental autonomies. In sum, the referendum on departamental autonomy, far from solving the problem, has transfered it to the constitutional assembly which puts at risk the democratic legitimacy of its decisions given that the new constitution must answer the demands of diverse political and social actors. Aside from these dynamics, this experience of citizen participation in the decisiom-making process is an example of the positive impact of an institutional reform in the strengthening of the democratic legitimacy and the efficacy of political institutions.
topic Bolivia
asamblea constituyente
referéndum
autonomías departamentales
descentralización
url http://colombiainternacional.uniandes.edu.co/view.php/100/1.php
work_keys_str_mv AT fernandomayorgaugarte referendumyasambleaconstituyenteautonomiasdepartamentalesenbolivia
_version_ 1716764100306927616