Current:Home > ContactMany Costa Ricans welcome court ruling that they don’t have to use their father’s surname first -FinanceMind
Many Costa Ricans welcome court ruling that they don’t have to use their father’s surname first
View
Date:2025-04-15 19:59:53
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — Many Costa Ricans on Friday welcomed a ruling this week by the country’s Supreme Court of Justice eliminating the requirement that people use their father’s surname before their mother’s on identification documents.
In Spanish-speaking nations, people usually go by two last names. In Costa Rica, if a man were named José and his father’s surname were Suárez and his mother’s Ortiz, by law he would have been registered as José Suárez Ortiz. The court’s decision maintains the requirement to use both names, but allows citizens to choose the order, giving them the freedom to put the mother’s first, as in Ortiz Suárez.
On the street in the Costa Rican capital, San Jose, 48-year-old messenger Carlos Barquero said it may be difficult to get over the custom of putting the father’s name first.
“But the truth is, it’s right to recognize the mothers and women in our society as well,” Barquero said. “I don’t see any problem with people choosing the order.”
The court modified a section of civil code mandating the order of the names, following a request for clarification from the country’s elections board after a resident came to the board asking to change the order of their name.
The code was based on “customary practices based on patriarchal and archaic concepts of family, which discriminates against women and today is incompatible with the law of the Constitution,” the court said in a news release.
“Surnames form an inseparable part of the personality of human beings and their order is inherent to the fundamental rights to name and identity,” the justices added.
Also in San Jose, librarian Mayra Jiménez, 42, welcomed the ruling.
“I feel that this is a right and an opportunity for people who want, for one reason or another, to change the order of their last names, so that they can be comfortable with their identity,” Jiménez told The Associated Press.
Larissa Arroyo, a lawyer and human rights activist, said in a telephone interview that the ruling opens the door for many Costa Ricans who for various reasons might want to use the mother’s surname first for themselves or their children.
Arroyo noted the ruling eliminates confusion when a child is born to a same-sex couple, in deciding who is the mother or father.
But it also eliminates a wider social pressure to carry on the last name of a family.
“This is related to the patriarchal issue of maintaining the family name, people spoke of ‘the name disappearing,’” Arroyo said, referring to relatives who favor traditional name order — or who may want to pressure people into having children.
“This is because there is a huge pressure on someone, that goes beyond them as an individual,” Arroyo said.
This decision came after another bill passed the Human Rights Commission in Costa Rica’s congress last year which also proposed citizens be able to choose the order in which their names are placed.
veryGood! (65188)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Retired Australian top judge and lawyers rebut opponents of Indigenous Voice
- Stock market today: Asian benchmarks mostly rise in subdued trading on US jobs worries
- A good friend and a massive Powerball jackpot helped an Arkansas woman win $100,000
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Kentucky had an outside-the-box idea to fix child care worker shortages. It's working
- Nobel Peace Prizes awarded to Iranian women 20 years apart trace tensions with the West
- Kosovo-Serbia tension threatens the Balkan path to EU integration, the German foreign minister warns
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- 18 migrants killed, and 27 injured in a bus crash in southern Mexico
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- 'The Exorcist: Believer' is possessed by the familiar
- Bruce Springsteen announces new tour dates for shows missed to treat peptic ulcer disease
- Hand grenade fragments were found in the bodies of victims in Prigozhin’s plane crash, Putin claims
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Mortgage rates haven't been this high since 2000
- Jailed Iranian activist Narges Mohammadi wins Nobel Peace Prize
- EU summit to look at changes the bloc needs to make to welcome Ukraine, others as new members
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
William Friedkin's stodgy 'Caine Mutiny' adaptation lacks the urgency of the original
Many Americans don't believe in organized religion. But they believe in a higher power, poll finds
Fire sweeps through a 6-story residential building in Mumbai, killing 6 and injuring dozens
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Police issue arrest warrant for 19-year-old acquaintance in death of Philadelphia journalist
The job market was stunningly strong in September
Want flattering coverage in a top Florida politics site? It could be yours for $2,750