Jump.to/tajikistan
Introduction
The land
Tajik Culture
The people
The economy
Administration and social conditions
Cultural life
Bibliography
Modern developments
Tajikistan in Central Asia
Tajikistan,history of
Physical geography
Karakoram Range
Pamirs

Tajikistan

Administration and social conditions.
Government.
In 1994 voters approved a new constitution to replace the Soviet-era constitution that had been in effect since 1978 and amended after independence. The new constitution establishes legislative, executive, and judicial branches. Unique among Central Asian republics, Tajikistan's constitution provides for a strong legislature rather than a dominant executive, though the president is head of state.
Members of the legislature, a unicameral National Assembly, are elected to five-year terms. The legislature has the authority to enact and annul laws, interpret the constitution, and confirm presidential appointees. The president is elected directly for a maximum of two five-year terms and appoints the cabinet and high court justices, subject to approval by the legislature. The highest courts include the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court, the Supreme Economic Court (for commercial cases), and a Court of Gorno-Badakhshan, which has jurisdiction over the Gorno-Badakhshan autonomous region. Although the constitution lists numerous rights and freedoms of citizens, it provides a mechanism by which these rights and freedoms can be, and are, severely restricted by law.

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