According to the legislation on the statute books.
Municipal courts or county courts.
Federal Court.
Yes, there are special courts that deal with bankruptcy, the District of Columbia and other US territorial courts, federal trade, and federal taxes
a juvenile court handles these matters
jurisdiction court
No. The majority of litigation, meaning court cases or lawsuits, is still filed in state courts. Challenges to federal legislation has always been filed in the federal courts because they have jurisdiction over acts of Congress. This has not changed since the New Deal.
Yes, a dual system of state and federal courts exist today. They generally serve different purposes. The state courts are restricted to state issues. The federal courts generally deal with federal matters but can deal with state issues in matters such a law suit or civil rights issue when one of the parties is from out of state. On some issues, it also serves as a court of appeals for state courts.
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers was created in 1984.
I'm currently a law student, according to my text book specialty courts are, "Lower courts that have jurisdiction over one specific area of criminal activity, such as illegal drugs or domestic violence" The book goes on to say specialty courts include: -Drug courts, which deal only with illegal substance crimes. -Gun courts, which have jurisdiction over crimes that involve the illegal us of firearms -Juvenile courts, which specialize in crimes committed by minors -Domestic courts, which deal with crimes of domestic violence, such as child and spousal abuse. -Elder courts, which focus primarily on the special needs of the elderly victims rather than the offenders.
Not all abusers are narcissists, but all narcissists are abusive. Thats right. Some abusers are BPD. Some are sociopaths. But all abusers have a personality disorder. All are selfish (to a dangerous degree). All lack empathy (when it gets in the way of their selfish desires..and there are innumerous desires, they are never satisfied).
Federal district courts should have 677 seated judges. However, that number changes a great deal and often, currently there are many unfilled judgeships in all U.S. courts with the exception of the Supreme Court.
The Federal Courts deal with issues that arise under federal law, like immigration, corporations, industrial relations, marriage and the like. The High Court also serves as the ultimate appellate court for all courts in Australia.