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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.
Bhattarai has a numerous published books. DISPLACEMENT AND REHABILITATION IN NEPAL: Law and Policy and Practice, (2001) [3] [4] COMMUNITIES, FORESTS AND LAWS OF NEPAL (2005) [5] PROTECTION OF HIMALAYAN BIODIVERSITY, International Environmental Law and a Regional Legal Framework (2010) [6] [7] JUDICIAL ETHICS AND CODE OF CONDUCT OF JUDGES IN ...
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.
She became a senior Advocate in 2007. [2] Karki was appointed an Ad-Hoc Justice at the Supreme Court on 22 January 2009 [2] and a permanent Justice on 18 November 2010. [2] Karki served as acting Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Nepal from 13 April 2016 to 10 July 2016, then as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court until 7 June 2017. [3]
He is the 29th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Nepal. [1] He has been appointed by President on the recommendation of Constitutional Council of Nepal and oathed by Bidhya Devi Bhandari, President of Nepal on 2 January 2019. [2] [3]
After the Supreme Court decision on the Nepal Communist Party, the party was divided into two, UML and Maoist Center. Devkota is a Central Committee Member of the Communist-Party-of-Nepal-Maoist-Centre in the position of Head of the Election Department. He was a former leader in the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). [2]
Ishwor Prasad Khatiwada was born on 7 March 1959 in Udayapur, Nepal. Khatiwada holds Bachelors of Law (LLB) and Masters of Political Science from Tribhuwan University, Masters of Laws in Tax Law and Constitution from Punjab University, Chandigarh, India. He was also the research fellow at Danish Institute of Human Rights in 2004/2005.