Judges can serve for varying lengths of time depending on the jurisdiction and the type of judgeship. In the United States, federal judges are appointed for life, meaning they can serve as long as they choose, unless they resign, retire, or are removed through impeachment. State judges, on the other hand, may serve fixed terms, which can range from a few years to several decades, and may be subject to re-election or reappointment. Ultimately, the specific duration of a judge's tenure is determined by the laws governing their position.
Until, they retire, they can not leave any time before that.
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It is 26,900 judges in 2008.
They're appointed.
Religion continues to keep women out of the workplace. here is a more reasonable answer women jobs are teacher, judges, government workers, medical doctors, writer, poets, lawyers, professors, and journalists
very carefully
20
Supreme court is a lifetime appointment
According to Article III of the Constitution, federal judges hold office during "good behavior," so all they have to do is avoid committing crimes or ethics violations, show up in court sober, and generally act like law-abiding citizens.
any one you keep long enough to make that much
you work up the ranks in british law jobs
Police and judges