Salim Joubran

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Salim Joubran (Arabic: سالم جبران) (Hebrew: סלים ג'ובראן) (born 1947) is an Israeli Arab judge on the Supreme Court of Israel. He has served as a Supreme Court justice since 2003 and became a permanent member on May 2004.[1] Joubran is the first Arab to receive a permanent appointment in the Supreme Court. He is the second Arab judge to hold a supreme court appointment, preceded by Abdel Rahman Zuabi, who held a fixed nine-month appointment in 1999.

Early life

Salim Joubran was born in 1947 in the German Colony neighborhood of Haifa, Mandatory Palestine to an Arab Christian family of Maronite origin.[2]

He graduated from the Terra Santa School of the Franciscan Order in Acre. He earned a law degree from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and entered private practice as a lawyer in 1970.[2]

Legal career

In 1982, Joubran left private practice after 12 years to accept an appointment as a judge on Haifa's Magistrate's Court, where he served for 11 years.[2] In 1993, he was appointed to Haifa's district court, and served in that capacity for another 10 years, following which he was elevated to the Supreme Court first as a temporary and then as a permanent judge.[3][2]

Joubran is an expert on criminal law.[2]

He was also the first Arab to chair the Central Elections Committee. In the Israeli municipal elections, 2013, he barred the national ruling party Likud's adverts for being "racist and almost certain to hurt the feelings of Arab Israelis and disrupt public order." This also overruled the advice of Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein who suggested the committee had no authority to regulate online adverts and posters.[4]

Academic and public positions

Joubran was a lecturer at the Law Faculty at the University of Haifa. He served as governor of Israel Rotary (dist. 2490) and chairman of the Zeltner Fund for legal research sponsored by Rotary Israel and Tel Aviv University.[citation needed]

References

  1. "15 nominees named for 4 justice posts". Jerusalem Post. April 14, 2004. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 "And justices all four". Haaretz. 7 May 2004. Retrieved 22 December 2013. 
  3. "It was Joubran's day". Jerusalem Post. May 25, 2004. 
  4. "Israel's elections bring 'racism' to the fore". Al Jazeera English. 21 October 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013. 
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