Abstract
The independence of the courts and the judiciary constitutes one of the foundations of the rule of law and is one of the basic values of the European Union. Judicial independence is also guaranteed by the principle of the separation of powers. According to this principle courts are the only competent body to execute judiciary powers and no other organs may be permitted to interfere in judicial decisions or their making. Democratic states must have the independence of the courts ensured in their constitutions. The basic function of judicial independence is ensuring citizens the right to a fair trial as provided in Article 6 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and Article 45 of the Constitution of the Republic of Poland. From the point of view of the right to a fair trial the relationship between the independence of the courts and judicial independence on the one hand and the guarantee of the impartiality of the courts and of a fair trial on the other, is important. The independence of the courts and the judiciary is closely related to the principle of the responsibility of judicial authority.References
Pietrzak, M., Demokratyczne, świeckie państwo prawne, Warszawa 1999.
Stawecki, T.J., Niezależność zawodów prawniczych i rządy prawa w społeczeństwie postkomunistycznym, [w:] Waradyńki, T., Niziołek, M. (red.), Niezależność sądownictwa i zawodów prawniczych jako fundamenty państwa prawa, Warszawa 2009.
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