Double day of activities of the Constitutional Court at the UDA

Double day of activities of the Constitutional Court at the UDA

The University of Azuay received on November 3 and 4 the judges of the Constitutional Court of Ecuador.

In the first instance, on the morning of November 3, the nine judges of the Court - Hernán Salgado, Daniela Salazar, Ramiro Ávila, Karla Andrade, Agustín Grijalva, Carmen Corral, Enrique Herrería, Alí ​​Lozada and Teresa Nuques - delivered to the city a Offering of flowers for the commemoration of the 201 years of independence of Cuenca.

Later they went to the University of Azuay and were received by its Rector, Francisco Salgado, who accompanied them -first- to the Hernán Malo Library in which various works published between 2017-2021 by the UDA Publishing House are exhibited. .

Prior to the plenary session of the Court, the president of the court addressed the representatives of the University expressing his gratitude for the hospitality and stated that they were "flattered" by the reception.

Finally the Ordinary Session of the Plenary NRO was installed. 038-0-2021, which was a private event.

On November 4, the conference “The Jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court of Ecuador. A view from its judges ”, organized by the Faculty of Legal Sciences.

This event was developed within the framework of compliance with the sustainable development objectives, promoted by the United Nations (UN), specifically with objectives 16 (Peace, Justice and solid institutions) and 17 (Alliances to achieve the objectives ).

"This is a historic day for the University in which we received the Constitutional Court of Ecuador, and as you all know, it is the most distinguished and notable Constitutional Court that our country has had," said the Rector and added:

"Today, in their role as academics, they are going to share and reflect with us on the jurisprudence they have dictated."

The conference was of vital importance, since it deepened in the minds of each participant the knowledge and experience emitted by each speaker, as well as the desire to search for the ethics prescribed in the Constitution, which makes life in society possible.

The judges for their part, in addition to sharing part of their experiences with the students, highlighted the work and activities of the University in service to society and the academic and administrative rigor with which the UDA is managed.

 

UDA Correspondents