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The Supreme Court of Justice (Spanish: Tribunal Supremo de Justicia) is the highest court of ordinary jurisdiction in Bolivia, based in Sucre. Its powers are set out in Articles 181–185 of the 2009 Constitution and the Law of the Judicial Organ (Law 025, promulgated on 24 June 2010). [1] [2] It was first seated on 2 January 2012. [3]
It was located in Sucre, 410 kilometres to the south-east of La Paz, Bolivia's capital. The Court was created by the Supreme Decree (Decreto Supremo) of April 27, 1825, [ 1 ] which transformed the Royal Audience of Charcas ( Audiencia y Cancillería Real de La Plata de los Charcas ) of imperial Spain into the Supreme Court of the newly ...
This category is for all past and present magistrates of the Supreme Tribunal of Justice of Bolivia; magistrates of its predecessor body, the Supreme Court of Justice of Bolivia, are also included. Subcategories
The tribunal is headquartered in Sucre and consists of seven members. It was first seated on 2 January 2012. [1] Its powers are set out in Articles 196–204 of the 2009 Constitution, the Law of the Judicial Organ (Law 025, promulgated on 24 June 2010), [2] [3] and Law of the Plurinational Constitutional Tribunal (Law 027, promulgated 6 July ...
The ministry was known as the Ministry of Labor, Social Security, and Health (Spanish: Ministerio del Trabajo, Prevision Social y Salubridad) until the creation of a Public Health Ministry (Spanish: Ministerio de Sanidad Pública) in 1938. [2]
From a page move: This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed).This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.
The Ministry of Justice and Institutional Transparency of Bolivia (Spanish: Ministerio de Justicia y Transparencia Institucional) is in charge of the justice sector of Bolivia. In addition. the ministry includes the following vice-ministries: [ 1 ]
The governing MAS party said the vote would make judges more accountable ad improve the efficacy of the judicial process. However, the opposition parties [which?] urged voters to either abstain or leave the ballots blank on the grounds that the election could "erode the independence of the judiciary" and strengthen President Evo Morales as 114 of the candidates were chosen by a Congress ...