Ministry of Justice (France)

The Ministry of Justice is controlled by the French Minister of Justice (Ministre de la Justice), a top-level cabinet position in the French government. The current Minister of Justice is Michel Mercier. The ministry is headquartered in Paris.[1]

The roles of the minister are to:[2]

An ongoing topic of controversy is the amount of control that the Minister of Justice should have on public prosecutions. While it seems desirable that the prosecution should not follow the whim of the executive, especially in cases involving politicians (corruption...), some argue that a prosecution service responsible to no one could go astray.

The Minister of Justice also holds the ceremonial office of Keeper of the Seals and, as such, is custodian of the Great Seal of France.

Contents

Bureaus and Offices

The French Ministry of Justice is subdivided into a number of departments, namely:

French Prison Service

The French government does not keep demographic statistics of prisoners. Around 2008 demographers, Muslim leaders, and sociologists estimated that inmate populations around France averaged to about 60–70% Muslim.[4] The concentrations were higher in metropolitan areas with concentrated Muslim populations, such as Paris, Marseille, and Lille.[5] In 2010 the prisons in the French Prison Service has one of the highest rates of prisoner suicide in Europe.[6]

Former Ministers of Justice

1790 to the Third Republic

Third Republic

Vichy France

Free France

Fourth Republic

Fifth Republic

See also


References

  1. ^ "Contact." Ministry of Justice. Retrieved on 6 March 2010.
  2. ^ Travaillot, Françoise. "French Ministry of Justice." Ministry of Justice (France). 15 September. 1. Retrieved on 6 May 2010.
  3. ^ Living in Detention – Handbook for New Inmates – French Prison Service (English). Ministry of Justice. Retrieved on 21 May 2010.
  4. ^ Moore, Molly. "In France, Prisons Filled With Muslims." Washington Post. Tuesday 29 April 2008. Retrieved on 24 June 2010. 1.
  5. ^ Moore, Molly. "In France, Prisons Filled With Muslims." Washington Post. Tuesday 29 April 2008. Retrieved on 24 June 2010. 2.
  6. ^ Davies, Lizzy. "French prison system under scrutiny after suicide." The Guardian. Monday 22 February 2010. Retrieved on 20 May 2010.

External links