Misplaced Pages

Supreme Tribunal of Justice (Venezuela): Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 15:44, 28 August 2010 editCaracas 2000 (talk | contribs)5,904 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 15:45, 28 August 2010 edit undoCaracas 2000 (talk | contribs)5,904 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
] ]
The '''Supreme Tribunal of Justice''' ({{lang-es|Tribunal Supremo de Justicia}} or '''TSJ''') is the highest ] in the ] and is the head of the judicial branch. The '''Supreme Tribunal of Justice''' ({{lang-es|Tribunal Supremo de Justicia}} or '''TSJ''') is the highest ] in the ] and is the head of the judicial branch.



Revision as of 15:45, 28 August 2010

Supreme Tribunal of Justice building in Caracas

The Supreme Tribunal of Justice (Template:Lang-es or TSJ) is the highest court of law in the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and is the head of the judicial branch.

The Supreme Tribunal may meet either in specialized chambers (of which there are six: constitutional, political/administrative, electoral, civil, criminal, and social) or in plenary session. Each chamber has five judges, except the constitutional, which has seven. Its main function is to control, according to the constitution and related laws, the constitutionality and legality of public acts.

The Supreme Tribunal's 32 justices (magistrados) are appointed by the National Assembly and serve non-renewable 12-year terms. Appointments are made by a two-thirds majority, or a simple majority if efforts to appoint a judge fail three times in a row. Under article 265 of the 1999 Constitution, judges may be removed by a two-thirds majority of the National Assembly, if the Attorney General, Comptroller General, and Human Rights Ombudsperson have previously agreed a "serious failure" and suspended the judge accordingly.

History

The Tribunal was created under the 1999 Constitution of Venezuela. For some years provisional statutes regulated the number of judges - initially 20, with three in each chamber except the constitutional, which had seven - and their selection. The statutes were replaced in 2004 by an "organic law" (a law required to clarify constitutional provisions). The law also permitted the National Assembly to revoke the appointment of a judge, by a simple majority, where a judge had provided false information as to his/her credentials.

References

  1. ^ Venezuelanalysis, 17 May 2004, “The Venezuelan Judicial System always was the Cinderella of the State Powers”

External links

Supreme Courts of South America
Sovereign states
Venezuela articles
History
Geography
Politics
Parties
Great Patriotic Pole
Democratic Unity Roundtable
Agreement for Change
Economy
Society
Culture
Stub icon

This government-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: