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The judiciary of Romania is organized as a hierarchical system of courts, with a civil law system. Provisions regarding its structure and organization are found in the Constitution and Law no. 304/2004 on judicial organization. [1] The civil courts are organized as follows: High Court of Cassation and Justice (Înalta Curte de Casaţie şi ...
The law of Romania is civil law. The Romanian judicial system experienced a major overhaul in the early 2010s, with the introduction of four new codes : the Civil Code (2011), the Civil Procedure Code (2013) and the Penal and Penal Procedure Codes (2014).
The Study on Romanian Court Rationalization analyzed the current structure of the district court system in part by considering court size, case backlogs, and allocation of judges and clerks by using and comparing population models, case load models, and a Data Envelopment Analysis model. Information gathered and presented determined that the ...
The lists contains cases of alleged violations of rights of Romani people brought before the European Court of Human Rights, European Committee of Social Rights, CJEU and United Nations human rights treaty bodies.
The Bucharest Court ruled in April of this year to send the case to trial, a decision Tate has appealed. Romanian court sends Andrew Tate's human trafficking case back to prosecutors Skip to main ...
The civil procedure code is the result of a major legal reform which began in the mid-2000s, prior to Romania's accession to the European Union.It was designed in such a way as to simplify and accelerate civil proceedings, following repeated condemnations of Romania by the European Court of Human Rights for breaching the standards of a fair civil trial as established by the ECHR.
According to the Article 146 of the Constitution, the Constitutional Court exercises the following powers: [1] to adjudicate on the constitutionality of laws, before promulgation, upon notification by the President of Romania, by the President of either Chamber of Parliament, by the Government, the Supreme Court of Justice, by a number of at least 50 Deputies or at least 25 Senators, as well ...
Formerly, only married males were allowed to argue a case or present evidence at a kris, with females' and unmarried males' interests being represented by their married male relatives. However, in the modern era it is more common for married women to take an active part in a kris as one of the conflicting parties, or as a witness.