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Topic: Supreme Court of South Korea


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 South Korea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The highest judiciary body is the Supreme Court, whose justices are appointed by the president with the consent of parliament.
After the war, South Korea went through several political turmoils: the autocratic government of Syngman Rhee was thrown out of power by student uprising and a brief period of civil rule was established in 1960.
The legislation was partly a response to the debate in 2004 over the relocation of the national capital, when it became widely known to the public that prominent national symbols of South Korea including the capital, national anthem, and official language were not specified anywhere in the written constitution.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/South_Korea

  
 The Korean Government
South Korea's highest court, the Supreme Court, consists of a chief justice appointed by the president and up to 13 other justices appointed by the president on recommendation of the chief justice with the approval of the National Assembly.
South Korea has witnessed significant political liberalization since 1987, including freedom of the press, greater freedoms of expression and assembly, the release of political prisoners, and the restoration of the civil rights of former detainees.
South Korea's nascent democracy is still shaking off many of the vestiges of its centuries-old history as an Asian monarchy.
www.koreanhistoryproject.org /Jta/Kr/KrGOV0.htm   (1265 words)

  
 South Korea, CSO Factpage
South Korea’s judicial system comprises of a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court.
Supreme Court (justices are appointed by the president with the consent of the National Assembly)
South Korean political history has always been skeptical because of the many invasions that they had to encounter including Japan, China and influences of USA (in the south) and Soviet Union (to the north).
www2.hawaii.edu /~meichow/factpage.htm   (1203 words)

  
 South Korea, CSO Factpage
South Korea’s judicial system comprises of a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court.
South Korean political history has always been skeptical because of the many invasions that they had to encounter including Japan, China and influences of USA (in the south) and Soviet Union (to the north).
However, South Korean politics took a severe change by the 1988 legislative elections, in the Assembly's greater powers under the 1987 constitution, and the influence of public opinion.
www2.hawaii.edu /~meichow/factpage.htm   (1203 words)

  
 South Korea, CSO Factpage
South Korea’s judicial system comprises of a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court.
South Korean political history has always been skeptical because of the many invasions that they had to encounter including Japan, China and influences of USA (in the south) and Soviet Union (to the north).
However, South Korean politics took a severe change by the 1988 legislative elections, in the Assembly's greater powers under the 1987 constitution, and the influence of public opinion.
www2.hawaii.edu /~meichow/factpage.htm   (1203 words)

  
 Situation and Outlook
The president with consent of the National Assembly appoints Chief Justice of the Supreme Court for a single term of 6 years.
The judicial system of South Korea consists of a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court.
South Korea was ruled by military dictators, presidents elected by controversial elections, and scattered civilian rule until 1987.
www.ianr.unl.edu /kendrick/425/Japan-Korea.htm   (3858 words)

  
 National Intelligence Service (South Korea) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The agency was officially established in 1961 as the Korea Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA)(중앙정보부), during the rule of Park Chung-hee's military Supreme Council for National Reconstruction, which displaced the Second Republic of South Korea.
The National Unification Board and the ANSP (and the KCIA before it) were the primary sources of government analysis and policy direction for South Korea's reunification strategy and contacts with North Korea.
The National Intelligence Service (NIS) is the chief intelligence agency of South Korea.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Korean_Central_Intelligence_Agency   (1753 words)

  
 South Korea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The highest judiciary body is the Supreme Court, whose justices are appointed by the president with the consent of the National Assembly.
In addition, the Constitutional Court oversees questions of constitutionality.
South Korea can be divided into four general regions: an eastern region of high mountain ranges and narrow coastal plains; a western region of broad coastal plains, river basins, and rolling hills; a southwestern region of mountains and valleys and a southeastern region dominated by the broad basin of the Nakdong River.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/South_Korea   (3773 words)

  
 Politics of South Korea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chief of State: President of South Korea Roh Moo-hyun (since 25 February 2003) (suspended from March 12 to May 14, 2004 while the Constitutional Court deliberated Roh's impeachment vote in the National Assembly.)
South Korea's judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court.
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the President of South Korea and the legislature called the National Assembly.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Politics_of_South_Korea   (591 words)

  
 South Korea: a brief social and political history
The last rung of South Korea's national government is the court system.
A brief examination of the social and political history and structure of South Korea.
This system is headed by a Supreme Court, followed by a Court of Appeals, and trailed by various district courts.
mnmn.essortment.com /southkoreahist_rvih.htm   (684 words)

  
 SIU Law Library: Korean Legal Research Resources on the Internet
This is the one and only complete collection of current laws, including the Constitution, Statutes, Cases, Presidential decrees, and Regulations of the National Assembly, the Supreme Court, and the Constitutional Court, Ordinances of Prime Minister, and Administrative Rules.
Extradition treaty with Korea : message from the President of the United States transmitting the extradition treaty between the government of the United States of America and the government of the Republic of Korea, signed at Washington on June 9, 1998.
Taehan Min'guk choyak mongnok = A list of treaties of the Republic of Korea (1948-1997.
www.law.siu.edu /lawlib/koreanlaw   (6977 words)

  
 South Korea (08/05)
South Korea’s judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court; the judiciary is independent under the constitution.
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the presidency, the legislature and the judiciary.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing primarily in China (1.9 million), the United States (1.52 million), Japan (681,000), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (450,000).
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2800.htm   (3705 words)

  
 South Korea (08/05)
South Korea’s judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court; the judiciary is independent under the constitution.
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the presidency, the legislature and the judiciary.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing primarily in China (1.9 million), the United States (1.52 million), Japan (681,000), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (450,000).
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2800.htm   (3705 words)

  
 South Korea (08/05)
South Korea’s judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court; the judiciary is independent under the constitution.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing primarily in China (1.9 million), the United States (1.52 million), Japan (681,000), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (450,000).
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the presidency, the legislature and the judiciary.
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2800.htm   (3705 words)

  
 South Korea (08/05)
South Korea’s judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court; the judiciary is independent under the constitution.
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the presidency, the legislature and the judiciary.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing primarily in China (1.9 million), the United States (1.52 million), Japan (681,000), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (450,000).
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2800.htm   (3705 words)

  
 South Korea (08/05)
South Korea’s judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court; the judiciary is independent under the constitution.
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the presidency, the legislature and the judiciary.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing primarily in China (1.9 million), the United States (1.52 million), Japan (681,000), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (450,000).
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2800.htm   (3705 words)

  
 National Intelligence Service - South Korea Intelligence & Security Agencies
The ANSP removed its agents from the chambers of the Seoul Criminal Court and the Supreme Court in 1988.
However, the act was the most frequently used tool to control political activity in the Fifth Republic, and the Chun regime was responsible for over 84 percent of the 6,701 investigations pursued under the act.
Despite the social and political changes that came with the Sixth Republic, the ANSP apparently still considered the support and maintenance of the president in power to be one of its most important roles.
www.fas.org /irp/world/rok/nis.htm   (2385 words)

  
 South Korea (04/05)
South Korea’s judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court; the judiciary is independent under the constitution.
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the presidency, the legislature and the judiciary.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing primarily in China (1.9 million), the United States (1.52 million), Japan (681,000), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (450,000).
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2800.htm   (2385 words)

  
 South_Korea
The highest judiciary body is the Supreme Court, whose justices are appointed by the president with the consent of parliament.
Currently it is controlled by South Korea, however, Japan also claims the territory and is asking the South Korean government for mediation by the International Court of Justice.
Korea forms a peninsula that extends some 1,100 km from the Asian mainland, flanked by the Yellow Sea (West Sea) to the west and the East Sea (Sea of Japan) to the east, and terminated by the Korea Strait and the East China Sea (South Sea) to the south.
www.comicscomics.com /search.php?title=South_Korea   (3971 words)

  
 ROK and Inter-Korean relations March 2004
Park Geun-hye, the newly-elected chairman of the Grand National Party, has long said that she would not walk in the shadow of her father, President Park Chung Hee, who was assassinated in 1979 after ruling South Korea with an iron grip for 18 years.
By Byun Duk-kun Staff Reporter The foreign community in South Korea on Wednesday dismissed the move by the country's opposition political parties to impeach President Roh Moo-hyun by saying it is only the last strain of the opposition's political strife aimed at the general elections.
Written Warning to U.S. Pyongyang, March 24 (KCNA) -- The Headquarters of the Movement for the General Election to Judge the Old Politics on Behalf of the June 15 Era reportedly made public a written warning addressed to the U.S. on March 18.
www.vuw.ac.nz /~caplabtb/dprk/SK_0403.htm   (5487 words)

  
 What Should the United States Do about North and South Korea?
Meanwhile, 37,000 U.S. troops are potentially in harm's way in South Korea, and relations between Washington and Seoul are tense.
Please join Cato scholars for a discussion of the interests and responsibilities of the United States regarding the Korean peninsula and recommendations on how to proceed in this ever-more-dangerous region of the world.
What Should the United States Do about North and South Korea?
www.catojournal.com /events/030124pf.html   (5487 words)

  
 South Korea (08/05)
South Korea’s judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a Constitutional Court; the judiciary is independent under the constitution.
South Korea is a republic with powers shared between the presidency, the legislature and the judiciary.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing primarily in China (1.9 million), the United States (1.52 million), Japan (681,000), and the countries of the former Soviet Union (450,000).
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2800.htm   (5487 words)

  
 Supreme Court of Japan --  Encyclopædia Britannica
As was the Federal Constitutional Court of West Germany, the Supreme Court of Japan was endowed with...
Located at the western edge of the Pacific Ocean, the Sea of Japan is bounded by Japan and the Russian island of Sakhalin to the east and by Russia and North and South Korea on the Asian mainland to the west.
Focuses on judges of the district court, and justices of the Supreme Court along with brief biography.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9070420   (960 words)

  
 South Korea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The highest judiciary body is the Supreme Court, whose justices are appointed by the president with the consent of parliament.
Korea forms a peninsula that extends some 1,100 km from the Asian mainland, flanked by the Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan (East Sea), and terminated by the Korea Strait and the East China Sea to the south.
South Korea's chaebol are often compared with Japan's keiretsu business groupings, the successors to the pre-war zaibatsu ("chaebol" and "zaibatsu" are Korean and Japanese pronunciations of the same Chinese characters).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/South_Korea   (3412 words)

  
 South Korea Encyclopedia Article, Description, History and Biography @ Karr.net
Korea forms a peninsula that extends some 1,100 km from the Asian mainland, flanked by the Yellow Sea (West Sea) and the Sea of Japan (East Sea), and terminated by the Korea Strait and the East China Sea to the south.
South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea, is a country located in East Asia, in the southern half of the Korean Peninsula.
South Korea's chaebol are often compared with Japan's keiretsu business groupings, the successors to the pre-war zaibatsu ("chaebol" and "zaibatsu" are Korean and Japanese pronunciations of the same Chinese characters).
www.karr.net /encyclopedia/South_Korea   (3387 words)

  
 The Korea Times
South Korea plans to recover wartime operational control of its military from the United States in 10 years, as part of efforts to build a ``cooperative self-reliant'' capability, a top security official said Friday...
South Korea plans to cut 1,000 soldiers from its 3,250-strong contingent in Iraq early next year, a senior government official said Friday...
The Supreme Court Friday acquitted a former lawmaker and a former spy agency official of charges of embezzling 119.7 billion won in state funds to finance election campaigning in 1995, indicating the money was President Kim Young-sam's slush fund...
times.hankooki.com   (382 words)

  
 South Korea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Korea forms a peninsula that extends some 1,100 km from the Asian mainland, flanked by the Yellow Sea (West Sea) and the Sea of Japan (East Sea), and terminated by the Korea Strait and the East China Sea to the south.
South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea, is a country located in East Asia, in the southern half of the Korean Peninsula.
South Korea's chaebol are often compared with Japan's keiretsu business groupings, the successors to the pre-war zaibatsu ("chaebol" and "zaibatsu" are Korean and Japanese pronunciations of the same Chinese characters).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/South_Korea   (3260 words)

  
 South Korea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The highest judiciary body is the Supreme Court, whose justices are appointed by the president with the consent of the National Assembly.
South Korea can be divided into four general regions: an eastern region of high mountain ranges and narrow coastal plains; a western region of broad coastal plains, river basins, and rolling hills; a southwestern region of mountains and valleys and a southeastern region dominated by the broad basin of the Nakdong River.
South Korea's relations with Japan continue to be turbulent, primarily due to a number of Korean-Japanese disputes stemming from Japanese colonial rule.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/South_Korea   (3371 words)

  
 Khaleej Times Online
TOKYO - Japan’s Supreme Court said on Wednesday it was constitutional for a second-generation South Korean born in Japan to be denied a promotion for a public job because of her ethnic origin.
The Supreme Court decision overthrew an appeals court ruling in 1997 that said the move by the metropolitan government violated the principle of equality guaranteed by the constitution.
Japan is home to more than 800,000 ethnic Koreans, mostly descendants of people who immigrated or were forced to come as laborers when Korea was under Japanese rule from 1910 to 1945.
www.khaleejtimes.com /DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/theworld/2005/January/theworld_January639.xml§ion=theworld   (310 words)

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