trijudicial
Trijudicial is an adjective used to describe a legal system or process that involves three distinct judicial entities or functions. The term applies primarily in comparative constitutional analysis where scholars distinguish a judiciary composed of separate layers that operate with a high degree of independence. In many common‑law jurisdictions the hierarchy includes trial courts, appellate courts, and courts of final appeal or a supreme court. When these three levels are formally recognized with devolved powers and obligations, the arrangement is sometimes referred to as trijudicial.
The concept emerged in the nineteenth‑century European scholarship on state constitutionalism. The notion was promoted by
In contemporary usage the term appears mainly in comparative law and public‑policy debates on judicial decentralization.