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Supreme People's Court of the People's Republic of China

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Supreme People's Court
of the People's Republic of China
Established in 1954
Jurisdiction China
Location Beijing
Composition method Presidential selection with National People's Congress approval
Authorized by Constitution of the People's Republic of China
Judge term length 5 years
Website http://www.court.gov.cn/
Chief Justice
Currently Wang Shengjun
Since March 2008
People's Republic of China

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the People's Republic of China


Government
Central People's Government
Constitution
Past versions: 1954, 1975, 1978
Guiding Political Ideologies

Mao Zedong: Mao Zedong Thought
Deng Xiaoping: Deng Xiaoping Theory
Jiang Zemin: Three Represents
Hu Jintao: Scientific Development Concept

President: Hu Jintao
National People's Congress
   NPC Standing Committee
NPCSC Chairman: Wu Bangguo
Legislative system
Premier: Wen Jiabao
State Council
People's Liberation Army
Central Military Commission
Law
Supreme People's Court
Supreme People's Procuratorate
Judicial system
Communist Party of China
   General Secretary
   National Congress
   Central Committee
   Secretariat
   Politburo (Standing Committee)
   Political Consultative Conference
Minor political parties
Elections (2008)
   Administrative divisions
   Human rights
   Foreign relations / aid
See also
   Politics of Hong Kong
   Politics of Macau

Other countries · Atlas
 Politics portal

The Supreme People's Court (最高人民法院; pinyin: Zuìgāo Rénmín Fǎyuàn) is the highest court in the judicial system of the People's Republic of China. Hong Kong and Macau, as special administrative regions, has their own separate judicial systems based on British common law traditions and Portuguese civil-law traditions respectively, and are out of the jurisdiction of the Supreme People's Court.

The court includes over 200 judges which meet in smaller tribunals to decide cases.

Since March 2008, the President of the Supreme People's Court and Chief Grand Justice has been Wang Shengjun (王胜俊).

The SPC trial system consists of a four level, two-hearing system in the trial process.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Procedure

The main gate of the Supreme People's Court in Beijing.

In 2005, the Supreme People's Court announced its intent to "[take] back authority for death penalty approval" over concerns about “sentencing quality”,[1] and the National People's Congress officially changed the Organic Law on the People's Courts requiring all death sentences to be approved by the Supreme People's Court on 31 October, 2006.[2] It has been reported that since the new review process, the court has rejected 15 percent of the death sentences decided by lower courts.[3]

[edit] Organization

Courts of the SPC:

  • criminal
  • civil
  • economic
  • administrative trials
  • other courts set up according to actual needs

There are also National Courts with ties to the SPC:

  • Military Court
  • Maritime Court
  • Railway Transportation Court
  • Forestry Court

Departments within the SPC:

  • research office
  • general affairs office
  • personnel department
  • judicial affairs department
  • administrative affairs department
  • office affairs bureau
  • foreign affairs bureau
  • education department

[edit] Presidents and Vice Presidents of the Court

  1. 1949 - 1954
  2. 1954 - 1959: 1st National People's Congress
  3. 1959 -1965: 2nd National People's Congress
  4. 1965 - 1975: 3rd National People's Congress
  5. 1975 - 1978: 4th National People's Congress
  6. 1978 - 1983: 5th National People's Congress
  7. 1983 - 1988: 6th National People's Congress
  8. 1988 - 1993: 7th National People's Congress
  9. 1993 - 1998: 8th National People's Congress
  10. 1998 - 2003: 9th National People's Congress
  11. 2003 - 2007: 10th National People's Congress
  12. 2008 - current: 11th National People's Congress

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Dickie, Mure (2005-10-27). "China’s top court to review all death sentences". Financial Times. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/180cd8da-46d8-11da-b8e5-00000e2511c8.html. 
  2. ^ "China changes law to limit death sentence". China Daily. 2006-10-31. http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2006-10/31/content_721315.htm. 
  3. ^ Bodeen, Christopher (2008-04-10). "China Hails Reform of Death Penalty". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2008/03/08/international/i025204S77.DTL&hw=china&sn=003&sc=829. 

[edit] External links

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