Public Employment Law and the Transition to Democracy in Chile
University of Miami Law School
Institutional Repository
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
1-1-1992
Public Employment Law and the Transition to
Democracy in Chile
Robert G. Vaughn
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Recommended Citation
Robert G. Vaughn, Public Employment Law and the Transition to Democracy in Chile, 23 U. Miami Inter-Am. L. Rev. 389 (1992)
Available at: http://repository.law.miami.edu/umialr/vol23/iss2/3
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389
PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT LAW AND THE
TRANSITION TO DEMOCRACY IN CHILE
ROBERT G. VAUGHN*
I.
INTRODUCTION
........................................................
II. THE LEGAL CONTEXT .....
III.
391
A.
The Civil Law Tradition and the Role of Law .....................
393
B.
The Regulation of Public Employment Law in Chile 1960-1990 .....
395
IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHILEAN EXPERIENCE ..............................
402
A.
Conflicting Perspectives of Public Employment Law ................
402
B.
The Importance of Law in the Regulation of Public Employment ...
407
1.
T he R ole of Law ............................................
407
2.
Regulation of Public Employment ............................
411
Institutional Parallelsand Divergences ...........................
414
C.
IV .
.............................................
389
C ONCLUSION .........................................................
I.
419
INTRODUCTION
By now, the dramatic stories of Chile's loss of democratic government as well as the events leading to a transition government
* B.A. 1966, J.D. 1969, University of Oklahoma; LL.M. 1970, Harvard University. A.
Allen King Scholar and Professor of Law, Washington College of Law, The American
University. This Article relies on research commenced while the author was Co-Director of
the Washington College of Law's Law Program in Chile in June and July, 1990. The
research is supported by The American University Law School Alumni Association Fund,
whose assistance is gratefully acknowledged.
Far too many Chilean professors, lawyers, and government officials contributed to the
author's attempts to understand the transition in Chile fairly to be named. However, the
author thanks Professors Eduardo Soto Kloss, Director of the Department of Public Law at
the University of Chile, who made this research less daunting, and Arturo Aylwin, the
Comptroller General of the Republic of Chile, whose cooperation and that of his staff
provided many and useful insights. Thanks also go to the author's colleagues, Claudio
Grossman and Richard Wilson, for their helpful comments on an earlier draft of this Article.
Of course, none of the persons who have helped is responsible for any of the author's errors,
nor -does their assistance necessarily suggest agreement with the author's conclusions.
Thanks also to Juan Milanbs for his assistance in Chile and for his translation of a number
of Spanish materials.
INTER-AMERICAN LAW REVIEW
[Vol. 23:2
headed by Patricio Aylwin have been told.1 On September 11,
1973, military forces ousted the elected government of Salvador Allende, ending one of the oldest democracies in South America. The
brutal repression that followed stirred protest throughout the
world.2 The events leading to the transition are complex, 3 but
throughout this period of repression, human rights advocates in
Chile preserved a record of the abuses, exposed the activities of the
military government, and sought to hold the government accountable under the law.' Partly as a result of the openings for political
action created by these advocates, the people of Chile have undertaken a period of transition between the military regime and
democracy.
Chile was one of the countries whose experience formed the
basis for political and social analyses of the breakdown of Latin
American democratic regimes in the 1970s.5 More recent events
have made Chile an appropriate case for examining transitions
from authoritarian to democratic governments. These findings being, perhaps, applicable to other transitions in South America and
Eastern Europe.
This Article examines one aspect of the transition and considers how public employment law in Chile relates to the transition to
democracy. In so doing, the Article describes the character and
1. E.g., SAMUEL CHAVKIN, STORM OVER CHILE: THE JUNTA UNDER SIEGE (1985) (describ-
ing the coup and repression following); Carlos Huneeus, From Diarchy to Democracy: Prospects for Democracy in Chile in Transition and Consolidation, in MEDITERRANEAN EUROPE
AND THE SOUTHERN CONE (Enrique A. i3aloyra ed., 1987) (suggesting conditions permit use of
noncompetitive elections to move to democratic rule); NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE FOR
INTERNATIONAL
AFFAIRS,
CHILE'S TRANSITION
TRANSITION TO DEMOCRACY]
TO DEMOCRACY
(1988) [hereinafter
CHILE'S
(describing the 1988 Presidential Plebiscite).
2. A number of official and nongovernmental organizations criticized the human rights
record of the military government. See, e.g., Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Situ-
ation of Human Rights in Chile, U.N. Economic and Social Council, U.N. Doc. A/34/583
(1979);
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL,
CHILE: EVIDENCE OF TORTURE
(1983);
ORGANIZATION OF
AMERICAN STATES, REPORT ON THE SITUATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN CHILE (1985)
OAS REPORT]; INTERNATIONAL
[hereinafter
COMMISSION OF ENQUIRY INTO THE CRIMES OF THE MILITARY
JUNTA IN CHILE, THE CRIMES OF THE CHILEAN MILITARY JUNTA IN THE LIGHT OF CHILEAN LAW
(1974) [hereinafter INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY].
3. See Huneeus, supra note 1; Manuel Antonio Garreton, The PoliticalEvolution of
the Chilean Military Regime and Problems in the Transition to Democracy, in TRANSITIONS FROM AUTHORITARIAN RULE: PROSPECTS FOR DEMOCRACY (Guillermo A. O'Donnell et al.
eds., 1986).
4. A description of these activities may be found in Hugo Fruhling, Repressive Policies
and Legal Dissent in Authoritarian Regimes: Chile 1973-1981, 12 INT'L J. Soc. L. 351
(1984).
5. See generally JUAN J. LINZ, THE BREAKDOWN OF DEMOCRATIC REGIMES: CRISIS, BREAKDOWN, AND REEQUILIBRATION (1978).
DEMOCRACY IN CHILE
1991-92]
regulation of public employment prior to the 1973 coup, during the
military regime, and during the period of transition. This examination is comparative in three ways. First, the experience in public
employment in Chile can be evaluated under two models of public
employment, both of which address part of the reality of the Chilean experience. In some respects, the transition in Chile can be
analogized to the change of administrations in a liberal democratic
state. In other respects, the transition can be analogized to the creation of a multiparty (...truncated)