Location
Constitute was developed by the authors of the Comparative Constitutions Project at the University of Texas at Austin. It was seeded with a grant from Google Ideas, with additional financial support from the Indigo Trust and IC2. Arabic Constitute was developed in partnership with International IDEA, which provided significant intellectual and material support. Semantic data structures were created by the Miranker Lab at the University of Texas using Capsenta's Ultrawrap. Site architecture, engineering, and design are provided by Psycle Interactive.
Why Constitute?
New constitutions are written every year. The people who write these important documents need to read and analyze texts from other places. Constitute offers access to the world’s constitutions that users can systematically compare them across a broad set of topics — using an inviting, clean interface.
Members:
Resources
Displaying 36 - 40 of 197Constitution of Burundi 2005
The constitution was promulgated by the President after 92.02% of voters approved it an a referendum.
Constitution of Congo (Democratic Republic of the) 2005 (rev. 2011)
The constitution was adopted by the National Assembly, and was promulgated by the President following the approval of 84.31% of voters in a national referendum.
Constitution of Mozambique 2004 (rev. 2007)
The constitution was approved by the National Assembly.
Constitution of Afghanistan 2004
The Afghan National Assembly (Loya Jirga) approved the constitution before it was formally signed by transitional president Hamid Karzai.
Constitution of Rwanda 2003 (rev. 2015)
The constitution was drafted by a Legal and Constitutional Commission, approved by the Transitional National Assembly and approved by 93.42% of voters in a referendum, before being promulgated by the President.