Abstract
The judiciary is one of the three basic organs of the State, the other two being the Legislature and the Executive. It has a vital role in the functioning of the State, more so, in a democracy based on the Rule of Law. Since time immemorial, law and the judiciary have played a vital role in the Indian polity. The Constitution accords a place of pride to the judiciary by conferring the power of judicial review of legislative and administrative action and entrusting it with the task of enforcement of the fundamental rights guaranteed under the Constitution.1 In a democratic polity, the supreme power of the State is shared among its three principal organs as constitutional functionaries. Each of the functionaries is independent and supreme within its allotted sphere and none is superior to the other. Justice has to be administered through the courts and such administration would relate to social, economic and political aspects of justice as stipulated in the Preamble of the Constitution and the judiciary, therefore, becomes the most prominent and outstanding wing of the constitutional system for fulfilling the mandate of the Constitution. The judiciary has to take up a positive and creative function in securing socio-economic justice for the people.

Barakatullah. (2010) Judicial System of Pakistan , Pakistan Journal of Criminology, Volume-02, Issue-3.
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