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A Labour court in Campinas, Brazil. Regional Labor Courts (Portuguese: Tribunais Regionais do Trabalho) are Brazilian appellate courts of the Federal specialized court system for matters of labor law. There currently are 24 Regional Labor Courts, geographically defined by numbered Regions.
The origin of the court was the National Labor Council, created in 1923, which was a part of the executive branch, subordinated to the Ministry of Agriculture, Industry and Commerce. [ 1 ] On 18 September 1946, the council was transformed into the Tribunal Superior do Trabalho .
The federal court system of Brazil has all its organs and competences listed and defined in the Brazilian 1988 ... Regional Labor Courts TRT 24 Total [1] [2] [3] 30 62
The Regional Labor Courts are composed of at least seven judges, unofficially given the title of Desembargador, recruited preferably from the local region, of whom a fifth must be lawyers with at least ten years of experience or members of the Labor Public Ministry, similarly to other Regional Courts, they are named by the President of Brazil ...
Brazil's top labor court on Thursday ruled in favor of workers at state-controlled Petroleo Brasileiro (PETR4.SA) in a wage dispute that could cost the world's most indebted oil company up to 17 ...
Headquarters of the Regional Federal Court for the Third Region, in São Paulo. The Regional Federal Courts (in Portuguese, Tribunais Regionais Federais, commonly called TRFs) are the courts of appeal in the Federal Courts of Brazil [], the second instance courts of the Brazilian federal justice system, responsible not only for appeals of trial court decisions, but also for writs of security ...
a judge of a Federal Regional Court, nominated by the Superior Court of Justice; a federal judge; a judge of a Regional Labour Court; a labour judge; a member of the Federal Public Prosecutor's Office; a member of a state Public Prosecution; two lawyers, nominated by the Federal Board of the Order of Attorneys of Brazil, the Brazilian Bar ...
SAO PAULO (Reuters) -Media platform X said on Saturday it would close its operations in Brazil "effective immediately" due to what it called "censorship orders" by Brazilian judge Alexandre de Moraes.