Eradicate corruption in new india in Telugu
Answers
strategies to address corruption in the judicial system include:
1) Drafting a code of ethics and professional responsibility and standards of conduct for legal and judicial actors in the justice system. This will provide a foundation for training, supervision and grievance handling on ethical issues. Codes should include specific standards that apply in cases of violence against women and girls.
2) Make ethical training a requirement in law schools and include a mandatory section on ethics in bar examinations. In the long run, a foundation in ethics will have a positive effect on corruption in jurisdictions as lawyers become judges or prosecutors. Many law schools require their students to attend a course on ethics. For example, see the following interview with the Attorney General of India and President of the Indian Bar Association regarding adding ethical requirements to the law school program in India.
3) Ethics courses should provide a set of principles for lawyers and judges that can be applied to real-life dilemmas. Training in professional responsibility and codes of conduct should be a requirement for new judges and prosecutors. And, when bar exams contain an ethical component, future lawyers should study ethical principles.
4) Support ongoing ethical training. Judges, lawyers, and prosecutors should be required to attend continuing education programs to maintain their qualifications. Court administrators should request and document the need for funds for continuing education. A certain number of hours of continuing ethics education should be part of the requirements for retaining professional certification and judicial designation.
5) Support mentoring programs offered by the court for judges and prosecutors. The experience of mentors should be particularly useful in recruiting diverse judges or prosecutors, or in assisting new judges and prosecutors in complex cases of violence against women.
6) Support a program through which new judges are required to declare their assets and the assets of members of their immediate family at the time they take office, their assets are monitored periodically during their tenure as a judge, and are monitored again upon leaving office. These statements must be monitored by an independent body and must be kept confidential if there is no indication of corruption. The declaration and tracking of assets throughout judicial careers inhibits corruption. A similar system for the regular review of personal assets and income should be established for prosecutors.