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Hello guys and fellow law students. This site is humbly made for information sharing and repository of things that I think I should array for my bar examination. Mainly, the content of this site are law related documents such as reviewers(see "Reviewers" tab), notes and research materials. This site is also dedicated for posting of announcements and assignments in my class/subjects were I am designated as beadle.

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Official Gazette GOES Online

As all law students know, laws to be valid and enforceable it must be published first. Our Supreme Court, in the case Tañada vs. Tuvera G.R. No. 63915.  April 24, 1985 (the first Tañada case), reasoned that an omission of publication would offend due process insofar as it would deny the public knowledge of the laws that are supposed to govern it (Romulo L. Neri vs. Senate Committee on Accountability of Public Officers and Investigations. G.R. No. 180643.  September 4, 2008).  The Philippine Constitution does not require the publication of laws as a prerequisite for their effectivity, unlike some Constitutions elsewhere. It may be said though that the guarantee of due process requires notice of laws to affected parties before they can be bound thereby.

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What right to privacy? What about?

The 1987 Philippine Constitution does not provide for specific provision on right to privacy per se. Instead, it only provides provisions on certain right to privacy like the privacy of communication and correspondence (Section 3, Article III); and the right to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures of whatever nature and for any purpose (Section 2,  Article III).

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