Are you asking what makes up the American Court System? Starting with the State court systems - from the lowest to the highest: Municipal courts (which can be made up of Justice of the Peace Courts or Magistrate Courts) - County Courts - State Circuit Courts - State Courts of Appeal - State Supreme Court. The federal court system consists of: US District Courts - Courts of Appeal (one for each federal court district) - US Supreme Court.
One main difference is that the French judicial system is based on civil law, with judges playing a more active role in investigating cases. In contrast, the American judicial system is based on common law, with a strong emphasis on adversarial proceedings and the jury system. Additionally, the French system has separate administrative courts to handle cases involving the government, while the American system integrates administrative law within the judiciary.
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The Supreme Court.
We don't have the list, but the constitution helped shape the judicial branch.
The American judicial system is based on the English system of justice, including the concepts of common law, equity, habeus corpus and trial by one's peers. The English judicial system, in turn, was developed variously by the kings and barons to protect their rights and privileges. The Bible was used as a source of moral authority, but was not the source or inspiriation of the judicial system.
statues of the British Parliament A+ Recovery
state and federal
Governors
British legal traditions
We don't have the list, but the constitution helped shape the judicial branch.
The American Bar Association (ABA) rates federal judicial nominees using a scale that includes three categories: "Well Qualified," "Qualified," or "Not Qualified." These ratings are provided by a committee within the ABA and are used by the Senate Judiciary Committee during the confirmation process for federal judges.
It is to decide on stuff if its constitutional or unconstintutional