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The current Constitution of Serbia was approved by a referendum held in 2006 during October 28 and October 29. It was officially proclaimed by the Parliament of Serbia on 8 November 2006,[1] replacing the Constitution of 1990. Previous Serbian constitutions were adopted during the Principality and Kingdom periods in 1835, 1838, 1869, 1888, 1901 and 1903, and, for the Socialist Republic of Serbia, in 1947, 1963 and 1974.
ConstitutionIn the preamble, Kosovo is defined as an "integral part of Serbia with fundamental autonomy"; the first article then defines Serbia as a "state of the Serbian people and all citizens". It also defines Serbia as an independent state for the first time since 1918.[2] Among the constitution's two hundred other articles are guarantees of human rights, including minority rights and the banning of capital punishment and human cloning. It also grants a form of self-rule and economic autonomy for the province of Vojvodina. It assigns Cyrillic as the only alphabet for official use, while making provisions for the use of minority languages at local levels.[3] Among the differences between the new constitution and its 1990 predecessor:
Kosovo in the ConstitutionUnder the opinion of the European Commission for Democracy through Law (the Venice Commission), the respect to substantial autonomy, an examination of the Constitution, makes it clear that this substantial autonomy of Kosovo is not at all guaranteed at the constitutional level, as the Constitution delegates almost every important aspect of this autonomy to the legislature.[4] Language in the Constitution of SerbiaIn the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia (1990-2006) as the official language was proclaimed Serbo-Croatian language. The new Constitution brought back Serbian language. See alsoReferences
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