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Arenzón, Gabriel D. vs Argentina (Ministry of Education)

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Arenzón, Gabriel D. vs Argentina (Ministry of Education) or (Arenzón, Gabriel D. c. Estado Nacional Argentino (Mrio. de Educación), Dirección Nacional de Sanidad Escolar) is a Constitutional Law case from Argentina regarding the Judiciary's ability to overturn decisions made by the national administration when these are deemed unreasonable or arbitrary.

Background and legal proceedings[edit]

Gabriel Arenzón was denied a physical aptitude certificate in 1981 while trying to obtain a teaching license, on the basis that he didn't meet the minimum height of 160cm for male applicants established by the National Ministry of Education through Resolution 957/81; he was only 148cm tall (4′ 8″ in Imperial Units) He challenged this decision in court, arguing that said resolution violated Article 14 of the Argentine Constitution, which recognizes education as a fundamental right, and initially obtained a favorable ruling. Successive appeals by the Ministry of Education elevated the case to the Supreme Court. Judges Carrió, Caballero, Fayt, Belluscio and Petracchi presided over the tribunal.

Arguments[edit]

Judgement[edit]

References[edit]

Dirección Nacional del Sistema Argentino de Información Jurídica (SAIJ)


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