@article{Sánchez Quiñones_2020, title={Citizenship, suffrage and property in the French constitutions of 1791 and 1793}, url={https://djhr.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/1758}, DOI={10.18543/djhr.1758}, abstractNote={<p>In just three years, the French Revolution enacted two Constitutions in which political rights received a radically different treatment. The first of these texts, signed in 1791, established a right to vote based on ownership as conceived by Locke. However, in 1793 a much broader right to vote was established based on the mere condition of the subject as an individual and disregarding any references to property.</p><p><strong>Received</strong><span>: 11 October 2019</span><br /><strong>Accepted</strong><span>: 20 February 2020</span><br /><strong>Published online: </strong><span>Articles in press 07 April 2020; No. 5 (2020) 26 June 2020</span></p&gt;}, number={5}, journal={Deusto Journal of Human Rights}, author={Sánchez Quiñones, Luis}, year={2020}, month={Jun.}, pages={99-124} }