court of appeals
judicial branch
the judicial system interprets the laws (Judicial Branch)Added: Law enforcement enforces them (Executive Branch)The state or federal legislature introduces them (Legislative Branch)
The Judicial Branch is pretty much all the courts in the United States. The highest court in the Judicial Branch is the Supreme Court.
Judicial
The Judicial Branch The United States has a dual court system, so the judicial power is shared between the state and federal court system.
The Judicial Branch is in charge of our court system by making decisions on various legal cases. The Supreme Court is the highest level and therefore overseas the Judicial Branch.
The judicial branch interprets the laws. In many countries with a separation of powers system, the judicial branch is responsible for ensuring laws are applied fairly and according to the constitution. They achieve this through a system of courts, with judges interpreting laws in the context of legal cases.
The court system of a country is known as the "judicial branch."
The Judicial branch
It is the Judicial Branch's job to interpret the Constitution. The Judicial Branch is in charge of the court system. There are three different kinds of courts found in the federal court system. The lowest level is the district courts. The 2nd level is the court of appeals. The top level is the Supreme Court. The power of Judicial Review gives the Supreme Court the right to overturn state laws and laws passed by Congress.
judicial branch.
The judicial branch has checks on it because the judicial branch does not create laws in the USA, the legislative branch does. The judicial branch's job is to interpret and apply laws in a just manner. The judicial branch balances the other branches because the judicial branch decides whether the laws enacted by the legislative branch are legal (not against the Constitution) and whether the laws are followed legally by the executive branch and the legislative branch.