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Juge

Juge is the French word for a judge, a public official who presides over a court and rules on cases, applying the law and ensuring due process. In Francophone legal systems, a juge sits on a bench to adjudicate civil, criminal, or administrative matters. Judges are typically appointed or selected according to the country’s legal framework; in France they are generally career magistrates who enter the judiciary through a formal process and rigorous training. A juge may perform various duties, including presiding over hearings, ruling on evidence, and issuing judgments or court orders.

French judges can have specialized roles. For example, juge d'instruction (investigating judge) oversees pre-trial investigations in

Etymology and usage: the word comes from Latin iudex, meaning "one who judges," and is cognate with

See also: jugement, magistrat, tribunal, judicature.

serious
criminal
cases;
juge
des
enfants
handles
matters
involving
minors;
and
juge
d'application
des
peines
supervises
the
enforcement
and
supervision
of
sentences.
The
exact
titles
and
responsibilities
vary
by
country
and
legal
tradition,
but
the
core
function—to
interpret
and
apply
the
law
and
to
ensure
fair
proceedings—remains
central.
the
English
word
judge.
The
feminine
form
exists
in
French
as
une
juge.
Beyond
the
courtroom,
the
term
can
appear
in
religious
or
literary
contexts
to
denote
a
divine
or
ultimate
judge,
or
in
familial
names,
as
Juge
can
be
a
surname
in
French-speaking
regions.