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Tribunal Electoral del Poder Judicial de la Federación; Constancio Carrasco; José Luis de la Peza; Flavio Galván Rivera; Janine M. Otálora Malassis; Felipe de la Mata Pizaña; Reyes Rodríguez Mondragón; Mónica Aralí Soto Fregoso; Felipe Fuentes Barrera; Crisis política del Tribunal Electoral del Poder Judicial de la Federación
The Judiciary of Mexico, officially the Judicial Power of the Federation (Spanish: Poder Judicial de la Federación; PJF), is one of the three branches of government in Mexico, and the sole federal judiciary power.
The 2024 Mexican judicial reform is a series of constitutional amendments that restructured the judiciary of Mexico. [1] The reform replaced Mexico's appointment-based system for selecting judges with one where judges, pre-selected by Congress, are elected by popular vote, with each judge serving a renewable nine-year term.
Building of the Supreme Court of Justice of Mexico Mexico's Supreme Court of Justice Building. The court itself is located just off the main plaza of Mexico City on the corners of Pino Suarez and Carranza Streets. It was built between 1935 and 1941 by Mexican architect Antonio Muñoz Garcia. [2]
The architect of the Federal Electoral Tribunal in Monterrey, was reputed Mexican architect Manuel De Santiago-de Borbón González Bravo, great-grandson of Queen Isabella II of Spain, whose lifetime architectural legacy to Mexico amounts to 11,000,000 built square meters nationwide, including many famous buildings and sites.
In the mid-1960s, Blas Roca Caldero began a process whereby the legal system in Cuba was resurrected to provide for the institutionalization of the Revolution. With the newfound relevance of the law to Cuba's revolutionary process, the practice of law began to become more widespread.
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Mexico utilizes a form of jurisprudence constante. The decisions of the Supreme Court are binding on lower courts as jurisprudencias only upon five consecutive and uninterrupted decisions ( ejecutorias ) approved by at least eight justices when in plenary sessions ( en banc ) or by at least four justices when in chambers. [ 1 ]