Admissions to the Judicial Career
This demographic study of the Judicial Profession between april and 2009 has been carried out, based on the Integrated Management System for Judicial Bodies and Judicial Professions. The greater detail of the study has focused on judges and magistrates in active service in the Judicial Profession, as set forth in article 349 of the LOPJ(Organic Law of the Judiciary), which establishes:
1. Judges and magistrates will bein active service when they occupy a position corresponding to the JudicialProfession, when they are provisionally assigned, appointed as assistantjudges, or temporarily seconded.
2. When a position held by a judgeor magistrate is abolished or reconverted with a change of jurisdictionalorder, he/she shall be placed at the disposal of the President of the HighCourt of Justice, under the terms established in Article 118(2)(3).
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1.Thematic:
Socio-economic analysis.
2.Indicators:
Entry into the judicial career:
-Entry: total number of
judges, magistrates and magistrates of the Supreme Court who have
entered the judicial career.
-Average age: average age of
judges, magistrates and Supreme Court justices of those entering the
judicial career.
Note: the calendar is linked to the date of entry.
Active judges:
-Active: total number of Supreme Court judges
and magistrates with active servicestatus, i.e. when they occupy a
position corresponding to the judicial career, when they are
temporarily seconded, when they have been appointed as associate
judges, or when they have been temporarily seconded.
-Average
age: average age of judges and magistrates of the Supreme Court with
activeservice status.
-Average length of service: average
seniority of personnel in active service in the judicial career of
judges, magistrates and magistrates of the Supreme Court with active
service status.
Departures from the judicial career:
-Exits: total number of
Supreme Court judges, magistratesand judges on permanent leave,
whether due to retirement, death, resignation or separation from the
judiciary.
-Average age: average age of Supreme Court judges,
magistrates and judges on permanent leave.
-Average length of
service: average length of service of Supreme Court judges,
magistrates and judges on permanent leave.
Note: the calendar is
linked to the date of termination.
3.Geographical scope:
The information covers the whole of the national territory.Data
is published at national level, by Autonomous Communities and provinces.
4.Application bodies:
Judicial bodies.
5.Temporal coverage:
Information on an annual basis, with data available since14/04/2009.
6.Updating of data:
The data is updated on an annual basis.
7.Normalisation processes:
The geographical data is standardised in accordance with the
Technical Regulations of the CTEAJE (reference standard for IT tools
in the field of the Administration of Justice).
8.Adjustment:
No seasonal adjustment, time series decomposition or similar
methods are performed.
9.Source:
The data is obtained from the General Council of the Judiciary.