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Ministry of Justice (United Kingdom)

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United Kingdom
Ministry of Justice
File:Ministry of Justice.png
Logo of the Ministry of Justice
Department overview
Formed2007
JurisdictionUnited Kingdom
Headquarters102 Petty France
Westminster, London[1]
Employeesover 77,000
Annual budget£10 billion (2008/09)[2]
Minister responsible
WebsiteMinistry of Justice

The Ministry of Justice has been a department of the government of the United Kingdom since 2007.

The Ministry is responsible for courts, prisons, and probation in England and Wales.

Further responsibilities include criminal justice policy, sentencing policy, and prevention of re-offending in England and Wales. The Ministry also handles relations with the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish governments in all areas for which it is responsible in England and Wales.

The Ministry was created on 9 May 2007 by detaching parts of the Home Office and merging them with the Department for Constitutional Affairs (formerly known as the Lord Chancellor's Department).

The department is located in 102 Petty France (previously called 50 Queen Anne's Gate) in Westminster, London.

Remit

UK-wide

The ministry handles relations between the three devolved governments (the Northern Ireland Executive, the Scottish Government and the Welsh Assembly Government) and the UK government.

It administers some tribunals in the whole of the UK, and has various other functions, such as human rights and electoral reform, which also covers the whole of the UK.

England and Wales

The Ministry of Justice does not have responsibility for criminal justice, courts, prisons or probation in either Scotland or Northern Ireland, only in England and Wales.

In the jurisdiction of England and Wales, the Ministry of Justice is responsible for dealing with all suspected offenders from the time they are arrested, until convicted offenders are released from prison.[3]

The legal system in Scotland is independent from that of England and Wales, and criminal justice, policing and prisons are the responsibility of the Scottish Government.

Crown dependencies

The Ministry of Justice has certain responsibilities in relation to the Crown dependencies:[4]

  • Acting as the main line of communication between Whitehall and the governments of the islands
  • Agreeing royal assent to legislation passed by the insular legislative assemblies
  • Extending UK legislation to the islands
  • Making Crown appointments within the islands

Core components

Ministers

Lord Falconer of Thoroton, who was Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs until the ministry came into existence, became the first Secretary of State for Justice. He also retained the title and role of Lord Chancellor.

Ministers of the Ministry of Justice as of 12 May 2010

The first Permanent Under-Secretary of State of the Ministry of Justice was Alex Allan, now Chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee, who was succeeded by Suma Chakrabarti.

Devolution

The ministry oversees the devolution settlement within the UK, which consists of the following institutions:

In criminal justice, the ministry's main counterparts in the devolved nations of the UK are as follows:

Criminal justice is not devolved in Wales.

References

  1. ^ 51°30′14″N 0°7′30″W / 51.50389°N 0.12500°W / 51.50389; -0.12500
  2. ^ "Ministry of Justice Spending" (PDF). Ministry of Justice. Retrieved 15 July 2010.
  3. ^ "Home Office to be split in two". BBC News Online. BBC. 2007-03-29. Retrieved 2007-03-29.
  4. ^ "Ministry of Justice – What we do – Crown dependencies". Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  5. ^ "Ministry of Justice Core componants". Retrieved 2007-11-11.

External links