justiciable - meaning and definition. What is justiciable
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What (who) is justiciable - definition

WHETHER A COURT CAN OR CANNOT RULE UPON SOMETHING
Justiciable; Justiciable case; Nonjusticiable; Nonjusticiability; Non-justiciable; Justiciable dispute; Justiciable issue

Justiciable         
·adj Proper to be examined in a court of justice.
justiciable         
[d??'st???b(?)l]
¦ adjective Law subject to trial in a court of law.
Origin
ME: from OFr., from justicier 'bring to trial', based on L. justitia 'equity', from justus (see just).
justiciable         
n. referring to a matter which is capable of being decided by a court. Usually it is combined in such terms as: "justiciable issue," "justiciable cause of action" or "justiciable case."

Wikipedia

Justiciability

Justiciability concerns the limits upon legal issues over which a court can exercise its judicial authority. It includes, but is not limited to, the legal concept of standing, which is used to determine if the party bringing the suit is a party appropriate to establishing whether an actual adversarial issue exists. Essentially, justiciability seeks to address whether a court possesses the ability to provide adequate resolution of the dispute; where a court believes that it cannot offer such a final determination, the matter is not justiciable.

Examples of use of justiciable
1. "Of course not everything is justiciable; there are matters that are not justiciable, but it is important to deal very gently with matters of justiciability," he said.
2. Ruth Gavison is the main opponent to expanding the areas considered justiciable and eliminating the demand for legal standing.
3. In fact, in the past the High Court has ruled that it would see as "non–justiciable" the nature of the discretion with regard to the release of terrorists.
4. By Yuval Yoaz Legislation is not the right way to determine what is justiciable, Attorney General Menachem Mazuz said yesterday in a statement in which he distanced himself from Justice Minister Daniel Friedmann‘s drive to limit the Supreme Court‘s areas of authority.
5. It exposed some real problems with the constitutional revolution and pointed out serious flaws in how famous cases of the 1''0s were handled (such as those of Ya‘akov Ne‘eman, Rafael Eitan and Reuven Rivlin). It created a valuable intellectual current whose goal was to balance that of the radical legalists, who had begun to believe that everything was indeed justiciable.