Judicial districts of Spain
In Spain , a judicial district is a territorial unit for the administration of justice, composed of one or more municipalities bordering and within the same province .
Among the municipalities that make up the judicial parties, one of them, usually the largest or highest number of contentious matters occur, it is called head of judicial party . In this head is the seat of one or more courts of first instance and instruction . Leading the rest of municipalities of the administrative area are the Magistrates' Courts .
History
The first division was done in Spain on legal grounds would be during the Roman Empire. The provinces are divided into conventus where the inhabitants of the district regularly met in the header to resolve legal issues. The people could go to either conventus according to their convenience and the distance that separated them, that is why the boundaries were unclear.
The first modern division of Spain in judicial districts was held in 1834 -through an approved Decree 21 April of 1834 in which provinces- subdivided following the new provincial management of Javier de Burgos . Among the motivations employment decree games constituency in the elections to Parliament of the Kingdom, was and facilitates faster receivership. 1 in 1834 were recorded in Spain, except the provinces provincial, a total of 451 matches judicial[nota 1].
Currently the number of these, variable throughout history, has been reduced. These divisions would be the basis for electoral districts and contribution. In 1868 there were 463 judicial districts and 8,000 municipalities. The judicial districts of the autonomous cities of Ceuta and Melilla are the 12th (Cadiz) and the 8th (Malaga).
National Judicial Districts
- Judicial District of Andalusia
- Judicial District of Aragon
- Judicial District of Asturias
- Judicial District of Cantabria
- Judicial District of Castilla-La Mancha
- Judicial District of Castilla and Leon
- Judicial District of Catalonia
- Judicial Ceuta
- Judicial District of Valencia
- Judicial District of Extremadura
- Judicial District of Galicia
- Judicial District of the Balearic Islands
- Judicial District of the Canary Islands
- Judicial District of La Rioja
- Judicial District of Madrid
- Judicial District of Melilla
- Judicial District of the Region of Murcia
- Judicial District of Navarre
- Judicial District of the Basque Country
Notes
References
- ↑ Orduña Rebollo 2003, p. 413.
External Links
- Ministerio de Justicia de España. "Cartografía de partidos judiciales".