Ministry of Justice (Austria) explained

Ministry of Justice
Native Name:Bundesministerium für Justiz
Formed: (as Supreme Office of Justice)
Headquarters:Palais Trautson, Museumstraße 7, Neubau, Vienna[1]
Coordinates:48.2092°N 16.3658°W
Budget:€1,87 billion (FY 2022)[2]
Chief1 Name:Alma Zadić
Chief1 Position:Minister[3]

The Ministry of Justice is the government ministry of Austria responsible for the administration of justice. The ministry exercises administrative supervision and is charged with the compensation of the judiciary and the prosecutors, manages their office buildings and facilities, and administers the prison system.

The ministry is headquartered in the Palais Trautson. The current Minister of Justice is Alma Zadić.[4] [5]

History

First established in 1848, the ministry's exact name and portfolio have undergone changes numerous times throughout the years. From 2018 to 2020, the ministry was officially called the Ministry of Constitutional Affairs, Reforms, Deregulation and Justice (Bundesministerium für Verfassung, Reformen, Deregulierung und Justiz).[6] In addition to its traditional responsibilities, it is tasked with supporting the Kurz cabinet's programof simplifying the country's unusually large body of constitutional law.[7] and of reducing the amount of law on the books in general.[8] [9] One of its departments, the Constitutional Office (Verfassungsdienst), is the body tasked with representing the executive branch before the Constitutional Court and the Republic of Austria before the European Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights. The Constitutional Office also assists other ministries in drafting legislation and in evaluating the constitutionality of draft statutes prepared elsewhere.It is also in charge of the Austrian data protection agency.

Structure

As of May 2018, the ministry consists of the Minister and her personal staff (Kabinett), the office of the director general, and seven departments:[10]

The Minister and her staff are political appointees; the general secretary and the section heads are career civil servants.[11]

Ministers

See main article: List of ministers of justice (Austria).

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Impressum . justiz.gv.at . 24 March 2022 . de.
  2. Web site: Bundesfinanzgesetz 2022 . service.bmf.gv.at . 23 March 2022 .
  3. Web site: Bundesministerium für Justiz . justiz.gv.at . 24 March 2022 . de.
  4. Web site: Türkis-Blau: Das sind die neuen Minister . December 16, 2017 . Kurier . 2018-05-06 .
  5. Web site: 16-köpfiges ÖVP-FPÖ-Team vereidigt . December 16, 2017 . ORF . 2018-05-06 .
  6. Web site: Bundesministeriengesetz-Novelle 2017; BGBl. I Nr. 164/2017 . de . December 28, 2017 . 2018-05-06 .
  7. Web site: Moser: "Föderalismus-Entwirrung" wird ab Sommer behandelt . March 15, 2018 . 2018-05-06 . Presse . de .
  8. Web site: Rechtsbereinigung: Der Stichtag an den Iden des März . January 1, 2018 . Aichinger . Philipp . Presse . 2018-05-06 . de .
  9. Web site: Regierung wirbt einmal mehr für Rechtsbereinigung . April 27, 2018 . Postl . Elisabeth . Presse . 2018-05-06 . de .
  10. Web site: Organisation des Ministeriums . de . 2018-05-06 . BMVIT .
  11. Web site: Der gar nicht so heimliche Justizminister . February 26, 2018 . 2018-05-06 . Kommenda . Benedikt . Presse . de .