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Nyaya (Nepali: न्याय, lit. 'Justice') is a 2018 autobiography by Sushila Karki. [1] It was published on September 28, 2018, by Book Hill Publications. [2] [3] Karki is the first female Chief Justice of Nepal. It is the first book by this author. She wrote the book after the end of her term on the bench. [4]
Book on Police and Human Rights published by INSEC, in 1997. An article on relation between international and law municipal law: "Appraisal of Nepalese context", published in the Law Journal of Patan Appellate Court Bar Association of Nepal, 2001.
The Supreme Court is composed of a Chief Justice and twenty Judges (Justice). The Supreme Court was formed in 2013 BS (1956 AD). The first Chief Justice of Nepal was Hari Prasad Pradhan. [citation needed] Judges of the Supreme Court hold their office till the age of sixty-five.
Supreme Court of Nepal 2 January 2019 – 13 December 2022 Justice Supreme Court of Nepal 27 May 2014 – 2 January 2019 Acting Chief Judge Appellate Court Butwal 15 April 2013 – 27 May 2014 Judge Appellate Court Butwal 20 March 2013 – 15 April 2013 Judge Appellate Court Rajbiraj 8 August 2011 – 20 March 2013 Judge Appellate Court Pokhara
This is a list of judges of the Supreme Court of Nepal, the highest court in Nepal. The list is ordered according to seniority. There are currently 17 judges (including the chief justice), with the maximum possible number being 21. As per the Constitution of Nepal, judges of the Supreme Court must take a mandatory retirement aged 65. [1]
Bhattarai completed his Doctor of Jurisprudence (J.S.D) from National Law School of India University in 2000. He went to Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA (2002-2003) under the Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship for a program on law, human rights and public policy at the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, Special program for Urban and Regional Studies of Developing Areas.
LGBTQ+ rights activists and couples in Nepal on Thursday were celebrating an interim order issued by the country's Supreme Court enabling the registration of same-sex marriages for the first time.
The chief justice of Nepal (Nepali: प्रधान न्यायाधीश) is the head of the judicial branch of Nepal and the chief judge of the Supreme Court of Nepal. The chief justice is the highest judicial officer in the country, and acts as a chief administrative officer for all the judicial system.