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The current Constitution of the Republic of Serbia (Serbian: Устав Републике Србије, romanized: Ustav Republike Srbije), also known as Mitrovdan Constitution (Serbian: Митровдански устав, romanized: Mitrovdanski ustav) is the supreme and basic law of Serbia. It was adopted in 2006, replacing the previous ...
The judiciary of Serbia (Serbian: правосуђе Србије, romanized: pravosuđe Srbije) is a branch of the government of Serbia that interprets and applies the laws of Serbia, to ensure equal justice under law, and to provide a mechanism for dispute resolution. The legal system of Serbia is a civil law system, historically influenced ...
Politics of Serbia. The Politics of Serbia are defined by a unitary parliamentary framework that is defined by the Constitution of Serbia in which the President of the Republic is the head of state while the Prime Minister is the head of government. Executive power is exercised by the Government (consisted of the cabinet that includes Prime ...
A constitutional referendum was held in Serbia on 16 January 2022, in which voters decided on changing the Constitution in the part related to the judiciary.. To bring the judiciary into line with European Union legislation, the government had previously proposed changing the way judges and prosecutors are elected, and the National Assembly adopted it by a two-thirds majority on 7 June 2021 ...
Supreme Court (Serbia) The Supreme Court (Serbian: Врховни суд, romanized: Vrhovni sud) is the court of last resort in Serbia which reviews and possibly overturns previous rulings made by lower courts. [1] The seat of the Supreme Court is in Belgrade. The court is currently composed of 50 judges (including the president of the court ...
6,639,385. 54.91%. A constitutional referendum was held in Serbia on 28 and 29 October 2006, in which voters decided on adopting a new Constitution. [1] The constitution is Serbia's first as an independent state since the Kingdom of Serbia 's 1903 constitution. Over 6.6 million people were entitled to vote in the national referendum.
The Constitutional Court of the Socialist Republic of Serbia (then part of SFR Yugoslavia) was established by the Constitution of Socialist Republic of Serbia, adopted on 9 April 1963. The Cour was to act as an independent body designated to protect constitutionality and legality in accordance with the Constitution and within the framework of ...
Politics of Serbia. Elections in Serbia are mandated by the Constitution and legislation. The President of the Republic, National Assembly, provincial (Vojvodina) and local (municipalities and cities) assemblies are all elective offices. Since 1990, twelve presidential, fourteen parliamentary and ten provincial elections were held.