The Statute of Autonomy of La Rioja (also known as EAR or Statute of San Millán)1 is the statute of autonomy that regulates the internal organization of the Spanish autonomous community of La Rioja.
It was sanctioned as an organic law on June 9, 1982, officially constituting La Rioja as the autonomous community. The statute allowed, under article 143 of the Spanish Constitution (known as the "slow way") and based on the exercise of the right to autonomy recognized in article 2 due to common historical, cultural and economic characteristics, as well as being provinces with historical regional entity allowed to obtain a certain degree of self-government; powers that were extended successively through reforms applied in 1994 and 1999 to acquire the powers allowed by article 148. It has been modified seven times, and there is another reform in process since 2017
It was sanctioned as an organic law on June 9, 1982, officially constituting La Rioja as the autonomous community. The statute allowed, under article 143 of the Spanish Constitution (known as the "slow way") and based on the exercise of the right to autonomy recognized in article 2 due to common historical, cultural and economic characteristics, as well as being provinces with historical regional entity allowed to obtain a certain degree of self-government; powers that were extended successively through reforms applied in 1994 and 1999 to acquire the powers allowed by article 148. It has been modified seven times, and there is another reform in process since 2017
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