Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland
- Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland
The Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland (FAC; _de. Bundesverwaltungsgericht, _fr. Tribunal administratif fédéral, _it. Tribunale amministrativo federale; _rm. Tribunal administrativ federal) is the judicial authority to which decisions of the federal authorities of Switzerland can be appealed. The FAC's decisions can generally be appealed, in turn, to the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland.
Purpose
The FAC was created with the federal judicial reform in 2005 to replace some thirty boards of appeal that exercised judicial oversight over the various departments of the federal administration. Up until 2007, the Swiss Federal Council, the supreme executive authority of Switzerland, also served as a final court of appeal in certain areas of administrative law. These judicial functions were also taken over by the FAC, ensuring that every decision of the administration can be reviewed in the last instance by an independent court of law.
Organisation
The FAC is organised in five divisions with 72 judges in total:
* I: infrastructure, finance and personnel (16 judges)
* II: economy, education and competition (15 judges)
* III: foreigners, health and social security (13 judges)
* IV: asylum law (13 judges)
* V: asylum law (15 judges)
The judges are elected by the Federal Assembly of Switzerland and serve for six years; reelections are possible. The president of the FAC for 2007 is Christoph Bandli.
Seat
The FAC took up work in Berne on 1 January 2007. It is set to relocate to its permanent seat in St. Gallen once the construction of the court building there is complete.
ee also
* List of judges of the Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland
External links
* [http://www.bundesverwaltungsgericht.ch Website of the FAC] in German, French or Italian
* [http://www.bvger.ch/7.3.6_bvger_broschure_e.pdf English language booklet on the FAC] published by the Court
* [http://www.admin.ch/ch/d/sr/c173_32.html Federal Law of 17 June 2005 on the Federal Administrative Court] in German, French or Italian
Wikimedia Foundation.
2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
List of judges of the Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland — This is a list of judges of the Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland.Division I: Infrastructure, Finance and Personnel Division IV: Asylum Law Division V: Asylum Law References* Election records for the 2007 12 term of office, Official… … Wikipedia
Federal Administrative Court — Several federal republics have instituted a Federal Administrative Court for judicial review of federal administrative actions:* Federal Administrative Court of Germany * Federal Administrative Court of Switzerlandee also* Administrative Appeals… … Wikipedia
Federal Insurance Court of Switzerland — The Federal Insurance Court of Switzerland (FIC; de. Eidgenössisches Versicherungsgericht, fr. Tribunal fédéral des assurances, it. Tribunale federale delle assicurazioni; rm. Tribunal federal d assicuranzas) was an independent division of the… … Wikipedia
List of judges of the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland — This is a list of judges of the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland. Contents 1 Current judges 1.1 First public law division 1.2 Second public law division 1.3 … Wikipedia
Federal Constitutional Court of Germany — The Bundesverfassungsgericht Germany … Wikipedia
Federal administration of Switzerland — Switzerland This article is part of the series: Politics and government of Switzerland … Wikipedia
Federal Chancellor of Switzerland — Incumbent Corina Casanova since 1 January 2008 … Wikipedia
Switzerland — <p></p> <p></p> Introduction ::Switzerland <p></p> Background: <p></p> The Swiss Confederation was founded in 1291 as a defensive alliance among three cantons. In succeeding years, other localities… … The World Factbook
Federal courts of Switzerland — The federal judiciary of Switzerland consists of the Federal Supreme Court, the Federal Criminal Court and the Federal Administrative Court. These courts are charged with the application of Swiss federal law through the judicial process. The… … Wikipedia
Switzerland — • A confederation in the central part of Western Europe, made up of twenty two cantons, three of which are divided into half cantons Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Switzerland Switzerland … Catholic encyclopedia