Abstract
The article is a detailed and elaborate historical account of the origins of Labor Law in the Second Spanish Republic. The author proposes that this period opened a political regime that took a qualitative and quantitative leap, legislatively speaking, that was crucial to overcome the phase of disjointed social legislation and guide the development of the current labor law. The 30s of the last century is the time when the Labor Law begins to be worthy of that designation, becoming defined scientific discipline. That law, documents the author, breaks definitively with civil precedents to articulate a series of own principles that serve to identify and recognize it as a separate discipline. The author's purpose is to review the salient features of that period of labor law delivery, beginning with the 1931 Constitution, which designates itself as a democratic republic of workers of all kinds in its first article.Copyright Notice:
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