Judicial reform

Judicial reform is the complete or partial political reform of a country's judiciary. Judicial reform is often done as a part of wider reform of the country's political system or a legal reform.[1]

Areas of the judicial reform often include; codification noxd of law instead of common law, moving from an inquisitorial system to an adversarial system, establishing stronger judicial independence with judicial councils or changes to appointment procedure, establishing mandatory retirement age for judges or enhancing independence of prosecution.

Examples

gollark: You just think you did because of orbital mind control lasers.
gollark: I mean, *technically* all existing bees were designed back in 2015 and put back in time as a joke.
gollark: Apioforms are just *that good*.
gollark: I'm right, so yes.
gollark: It's a definition. It's right.

See also

Notes

  1. Peter Barenboim, Natalya Merkulova. "The 25th Anniversary of Constitutional Economics: The Russian Model and Legal Reform in Russia, in The World Rule of Law Movement and Russian Legal Reform", edited by Francis Neate and Holly Nielsen, Justitsinform, Moscow (2007).


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