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Concentrating the highest participation in the 1st degree
According to the counselor, the highest concentration is in the 1st degree, with 40% of female judges; female judges and ministers account for just 25% of this presence. The Labor Court maintained the highest levels, with 49%, but decreased in relation to the previous data, from 2019, also . "The only thing that improved was the Electoral Court", he highlighted. Despite its different composition from the others, it achieved an increase in the percentage of female judges. In 2019, there were 31.3% active. Currently, it registers 34%, of which 35% are first-degree judges and 21% are female judges and ministers. "The lowest rates are identified in the Military Justice, with 21%, 39% of which are first degree judges", he illustrated. Only six courts have more female judges than male judges. They are: Court of Justice of Pará, with 57% female magistrates, four labor courts: TRT 5, TRT 2, TRT 11 and TRT 17, and the Regional Electoral Court of Sergipe, with 67% of female judges.
On the other hand, 13 courts have only male judges", the rapporteur further reinforced. The good news is the staff, with a much higher percentage of civil servants in commissioned roles and commission positions, said counselor Salise. "It's 59% in the State Court and 53% in the Federal Labor Court", she mentioned. With the data pres Special Phone Number Data ented, Judge Salise also defended the importance of periodic data collection. "Despite the policy created, our actions, nothing has evolved since 2019 in terms of female participation in the courts", she emphasized. The National Policy to Encourage Female Participation in the Judiciary was established in 2018 with the approval of Resolution CNJ 255 . Repository The counselor also took the opportunity to announce that the CNJ's Repository of Women Jurists is now available, with the publication of 500 CVs. ![]() This repository should be used by all those who want to create working groups, hold legal events and give visibility to women with publications, with doctorate and master's careers, who are university professors, who carry out research", she recommended. She informed that she is campaigning "to connect courts that already have this type of repository of women who can be mentioned in votes, have their participation included in competition panels, at tables at legal events." Salise recalled that the project, now completed, was taken over by then counselor Ivana Farina, her predecessor in supervising the Committee to Encourage Women's Institutional Participation in the Judiciary. |
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