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  1. The Constitution of Costa Rica is the supreme law of Costa Rica. At the end of the 1948 Costa Rican Civil War, José Figueres Ferrer oversaw the Costa Rican Constitutional Assembly, which drafted the document. It was approved on 1949 November 7.

  2. Costa Rica (ejtsd: [kosztarríka]; jelentése spanyolul „gazdag part”) a közép-amerikai kontinenshídon elterülő ország, szárazföldön északon Nicaragua, délkeleten Panama határolja. Karib-tengeri és csendes-óceáni partvidékét keskeny síkság kíséri.

  3. List of constitutions of Costa Rica. Costa Rica has possessed multiple and very varied constitutional bodies. [ 1] The Constitutional Assemblies of Costa Rica have been, in almost all cases, convened after a coup d'état or armed conflict, since it is the custom in Costa Rica that when a government is deposed, an Assembly will be convened to ...

    Constitution
    Validity
    State
    1812-1814 and 1820-1821
    Diputación of the Spanish Empire
    1821-1823
    Province of Costa Rica, at least ...
    1823
    Province of Costa Rica, at least ...
    1823-1824
    • Costa Rica is a democratic, free, independent, multiethnic and multicultural Republic.
    • Sovereignty resides exclusively in the Nation.
    • No one may arrogate the sovereignty; whoever does so will commit the crime of treason [against] the Nation.
    • No person or group of persons may assume the representation of the People, arrogate their rights, or make petitions in their name. The infraction of this Article will be sedition.
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Costa_RicaCosta Rica - Wikipedia

    An estimated 352,381 people live in the capital and largest city, San José, with around two million people in the surrounding metropolitan area. [ 14 ] The sovereign state is a presidential republic. It has a long-standing and stable constitutional democracy and a highly educated workforce. [ 15 ]

  5. Costa Rica's Constitution of 1949 with Amendments through 2020.

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  7. António Pinto Soares. (1780–1865) September 1842. Liberal. Came to power in popular uprising, and quickly resigned. 9. José María Alfaro Zamora. (1799–1865) 1842–1844.

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