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article 370 of the Indian constitution deals with temparory special provission granted in the Indian union to the state of jammu and kashmir
judges in the special courts do not serve lifetime appointments Constitutional Courts have a broader jurisdiction compared to special courts.
Constitutional court( also called Article III Courts or regular Courts) = is created by Congress and exercise the broad " judicial power of the United States" as stated in Article III Special Court( also called the Legislative Courts or Article I Courts )= Created by Congress under the power given to it in Article I " to constitute Tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court ", these courts have narrowly defined powers. regular courts or constitutional courts exercise in a broader way while the tribunals act in relation to limited matter. constitution courts are a bit formal and also follow the rules of evidence n the other hand the tribunals are often informal and dont follow the rules of evidence the courts act according to what they r told by the lawyers, witnesses and parties but the tribunals mostly act very practically and actively like making inquiries visiting the vicinity etc
Article 1 of the constitution
A constitutional court is one exercising the judicial powers found in Article III of the constitution, and therefore its judges are given constitutional protection: they may not be fired nor may their salaries be reduced while they are in office.A legislative court is one set up be Congress for some specialized purpose and staffed with people who have fixed terms of office and can be removed or have their salaries reduced.The highest constitutional court in the USA is the US Supreme Court. Lower level Federal courts may make decisions on the constitutional validity of laws, however, these decisions are subject to review by the latter court if the issue is taken up by the Supreme Court. The US Supreme Court can choose to not review a lower court's decision.
judges in the special courts do not serve lifetime appointment
A proposed amendment must be ratified by 3/4 of the individual states.Only the 21st Amendment was ratified by special state conventions called for the purpose, the second method allowed by Article V of the US Constitution.
yes, article II section 3 U.S. Constitution ture
Article I of the Constitution sets up the legislative branch of the government. It spells out the powers of Congress, delineating those that only Congress has and those the states do not.
The Constitution (Article 1, Section 2, Clause 4) states: "When Vacancies happen in the Representation from any State, the Executive Authority thereof shall issue Writs of Election to fill such Vacancies." This means that all House vacancies be filled by special election. There is no constitutional provision for the appointment of interim Representatives.
It would conflict with the Charters Equality Rights which include no discrimination based on race. Article 35 gives special status based on race.