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Justice of the Constitutional Court of Korea
| Justice of theConstitutional Court of Korea |
|---|
| 헌법재판소 재판관 (Korean) |
| Emblem of the Constitutional Court |
| Flag of the Constitutional Court of Korea |
| Current Justice of the Constitutional Court of Korea as of July 24, 2025 |
| Constitutional Court of Korea |
| Your Honor |
| Justice |
| Council of Constitutional Court Justices |
| Jongno, Seoul |
| President of South Korea |
| Six years, renewable |
| Constitution of South Korea |
| 1 September 1988 (1988-09-01) |
| Official english website |
The Constitutional Court of Korea is one of two highest courts in the court system of South Korea. It is composed of nine Constitutional Court justices (Korean: 헌법재판소 재판관; Hanja: 憲法裁判所 裁判官; RR: Heonbeopjaepanso Jaepangwan). One of the nine justices serves as the chief justice, officially titled the President of the Constitutional Court. The number of Constitutional Court justices is specified in Article 111 Clause 2 of the Constitution of South Korea.
By Article 111 Clause 2 of the constitution, all of the Constitutional Court justices are appointed by the president of South Korea. However, following Article 111 Clause 3 of the constitution, three of the Constitutional Court justices should be appointed from candidates selected by the National Assembly, and another three should be appointed from candidates nominated by the Supreme Court chief justice. Thus, only three of nine Constitutional Court justices are directly appointed by the president of South Korea. They serve for a renewable six-year term under Article 112 Clause 1 of the constitution. All but two justices retired without renewing the term, citing the potential harm to judicial independence and outsize influence of the president of South Korea on the Constitutional Court.
According to Article 5 Clause 1 of the Constitutional Court Act, Constitutional Court justices should be at least 40 years old, qualified as an attorney, and have more than 15 years of career in legal practice or legal academia.
Nine inaugural justices of the Court in 1988
This table lists current justices in Constitutional Court of Korea.
| Name | Tenure / Current Length | Appointed by | Selected·Nominated by | Education |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim Hyungdu | March 31, 2023 / 3 years, 1 month | Yoon Suk Yeol | Chief Justice (Kim Myeong-soo) | Seoul National University |
| Jeong Jeong-mi | April 17, 2023 / 3 years | Yoon Suk Yeol | Chief Justice (Kim Myeong-soo) | |
| Jeong Hyeong-sik | December 18, 2023 / 2 years, 4 months | Yoon Suk Yeol | (Directly by President of South Korea) | |
| Kim Bok-hyeong | September 21, 2024 / 1 year, 7 months | Yoon Suk Yeol | Chief Justice (Cho Hee-dae) | |
| Cho Hanchang | January 1, 2025 / 1 year, 4 months | Choi Sang-mok | National Assembly (People Power Party) | |
| Chung Kyesun | January 1, 2025 / 1 year, 4 months | Choi Sang-mok | National Assembly (Democratic Party) | |
| Ma Eunhyeok | April 9, 2025 / 1 year, 1 month | Han Duck-soo | National Assembly (Democratic Party) | |
| Kim Sang-hwan | July 23, 2025 / 9 months | Lee Jae Myung | (Directly by President of South Korea) | |
| Oh Yeong-jun | July 23, 2025 / 9 months | Lee Jae Myung | (Directly by President of South Korea) |
This table lists former justices in the Constitutional Court of Korea. Since South Korea adopted American styled 3-year law school system for legal education in 2008, 'education' column of below table means where former justices received undergraduate degrees.
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Judiciary of South Korea
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Constitutional Court of Korea
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President of the Constitutional Court of Korea
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Lists of supreme court justices
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