Andorra Justice Chief Calls for Full Judicial Overhaul
Josep Maria Rossell urges comprehensive legislative reforms to fix structural flaws, high recusals, and judge incompatibilities amid evolving.
Key Points
- High recusals, judge incompatibilities, and paralysis risks plague system.
- Calls for structural overhaul beyond administrative fixes.
- Ongoing government collaboration to redefine competencies.
- Urges action now for 21st-century justice amid rapid changes.
Josep Maria Rossell, president of Andorra's Superior Council of Justice (CSJ), has called for a comprehensive legislative overhaul of the judicial system to address its structural shortcomings and prepare it for future challenges.
In an opinion piece published in *Bon Dia*, Rossell argued that the current framework requires adaptation to "real needs," building on recent progress, fixing persistent issues, and creating a more robust model. He stressed that "now is the time to act," as 21st-century justice cannot afford further delays amid rapidly evolving social, technological, and institutional contexts.
Rossell highlighted specific problems, including a high volume of recusals, incompatibilities among judges, and risks of temporary paralysis. He described these as symptoms of a system demanding more than administrative fixes, necessitating a full review.
The CSJ head noted ongoing collaboration with the government over recent months to redefine competencies and lay the groundwork for a new judicial architecture. He emphasised that the required changes go beyond cosmetic or partial adjustments, amounting to a "structural necessity" and "profound update" to ensure efficacy, independence, and public trust.
Rossell reviewed achievements in modernising the judiciary but warned that unresolved challenges underscore the urgency of legislative action.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: