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  2. Court administration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_administration

    Judicial model, or autonomous model empowers judiciary itself to handle court administration. Example of this model is Federal judiciary of the United States, where Judicial Conference constituted by chief judge of each federal courts makes policy decision, and Administrative Office composed by the Chief Justice executes it.

  3. Court clerk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_clerk

    A court clerk (British English: clerk to the court or clerk of the court / k l ɑːr k /; American English: clerk of the court or clerk of court / k l ɜːr k /) is an officer of the court whose responsibilities include maintaining records of a court and administering oaths to witnesses, jurors, and grand jurors [1] [2] as well as performing some quasi-secretarial duties. [3]

  4. Human resource management in public administration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Resource_Management...

    The function, in terms of the employers benefit, is to create a management system to achieve long-term goals and plans. The management allows companies to study, target, and execute long-term employment goals. For any company to have an efficient ability to grow and advance human resource management is a key.

  5. Staff and line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staff_and_line

    Staff functions are added to help line managers in meeting their objectives. The tendency for the scope and role of effective managers to increase, sometimes to untenable levels, can be greatly mitigated by an able staff function providing invaluable support to enable a full management role to be expressed within the time and cost bounds of the ...

  6. National Association for Court Management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Association_for...

    The National Association for Court Management (NACM) [1] is a non-profit organization in the United States that promotes professional management education for court administrators and judges. In the United States and most other countries in the common law tradition, supervising judges continue their traditional role as the presiding authorities ...

  7. Administrative Office of the United States Courts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Administrative_Office_of...

    The Roosevelt administration's Judicial Reorganization Bill of 1937, best known for its provision to enlarge the Supreme Court, included provision for appointment of a proctor who would gather data on the business of the courts and make recommendations for reassignment of judges and improved case management. Many district court judges resisted ...

  8. Officer of the court - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Officer_of_the_court

    Court interpreters and translators have an absolute ethical duty to tell judges the truth and avoid evasion. Court-appointed special advocates in some jurisdictions are considered officers of the court. Process servers carry out service of process. In some jurisdictions, they are appointed by a court and are considered appointed officers of the ...

  9. Judicial officer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicial_officer

    Environmental Judicial Officers at the scene of an environmental crime in Kuwait.. In Kuwait, Judicial Officers are sworn law enforcement agents with the capacity to enforce the law within their speciality, an example would be The Environment Public Authority's environmental Judicial Officers, which function, effectively, as an Environmental judicial police force that enforces the country's ...