History, asked by arjunkumar1232, 9 months ago

What is a justicable question?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Justiciability refers to the types of matters that a court can adjudicate. ... Typically to be justiciable, the court must not be offering an advisory opinion, the plaintiff must have standing, and the issues must be ripe but neither moot nor violative of the political question doctrine.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Justiciability refers to the types of matters that a court can adjudicate

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