El anticlericalismo en el congreso constituyente de 1916-1917


Por: Soberanes Fernández J.L.

Publicada: 1 ene 2017
Resumen:
The Constitution of the Mexican United States of February 5, 1917 brought many important contributions, not only to Mexican constitutionalism, but also to the universal one, for example, its social orientation. However, it also brought much debated issues, such as the treatment that gave it to the religious phenomenon in our country, as it was inspired by an anti-clerical orientation that came from a mixture of protestantism, freemasonry and radical liberalism that, originated in a modern position arising from an opposition to a conservative religious stance, way of thought that had refused to follow the winds of modernity in the nineteenth century. Therefore, anticlericalism tried to be a rational response to a non-rational position. However, in the case of the Constitutional Congress of Queretaro, anticlericalism became a non-rational position that denied religious freedom. In this paper, it is intend to give a legal historical explanation of the anticlericalism of the Constituent Congress of Queretaro (1916-1917).

Filiaciones:
Soberanes Fernández J.L.:
 Universidad de Valencia, Spain

 Facultad de Derecho de la UNAM, Mexico
ISSN: 14059193
Editorial
Instituto de Investigaciones Juridicas de la UNAM, México
Tipo de documento: Article
Volumen: 1 Número: 36
Páginas: 199-241