1. The restriction of fundamental rights in the face of public security
- Author
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Aline Ferreira de Sousa, Bianca de Santana Costa, Erick da Cunha Nascimento, Gislany Coutinho Carvalho, Marcus Vinicius Gomes Borges, Matheus Brabo Honostorio, Mayane Ferreira da Silva, Claudio Alberto Gellis de Mattos Dias, Amanda Alves Fecury, Carla Viana Dendasck, Karla Ferreira, Yara Lorrane Souza de Barros, Aline Ferreira de Sousa, Bianca de Santana Costa, Erick da Cunha Nascimento, Gislany Coutinho Carvalho, Marcus Vinicius Gomes Borges, Matheus Brabo Honostorio, Mayane Ferreira da Silva, Claudio Alberto Gellis de Mattos Dias, Amanda Alves Fecury, Carla Viana Dendasck, Karla Ferreira, and Yara Lorrane Souza de Barros
- Abstract
The 1988 Brazilian Constitution guarantees the right to life, freedom, health, work, housing, leisure, assistance to the homeless, among others, as well as the right to security. Public security is a complex issue with peculiarities that evolve with society, and it is a constitutional right. In the military regime of 1964, fundamentals were repressed and restricted. With the inauguration of a civilian president, Brazil takes as scope, the formation of a democratic country, formed in 1985. There was the construction of a new Constitution, which only on October 5, 1988 was finalized and promulgated. The objective of this article is to carry out an approach on Public Security and its restrictions in the light of the Brazilian constitutions granted or enacted during and after the military regime. A bibliographical research was carried out in the databases of the World Wide Web. It brings together a theoretical basis on fundamental rights and their restrictions as a consequence of guaranteeing public security, throughout the Constitutions of 1967 and 1969, in contrast to the affirmation of these rights on the Federal Constitution of 1988. It can be seen that, in normative terms, there has been an evolution in the guarantee of fundamental rights, as well as in the scope of public security.
- Published
- 2022