Established as early as 1826, the Ministry of Human Rights, Justice, Governance and Decentralization of Honduras was created from the territorial division of Honduras and was initially composed of seven departments. The ministry is responsible for matters pertaining to the internal government, which include the following:[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
The coordination, liaison, supervision and evaluation of the departmental and municipal regimes
Monitoring political parties with regard to their relationship with the government
Publishing laws, regulations and general provisions
The extrajudicial solution of conflicts and the coordination and liaison with the organs of the Judicial Power, Public Ministry, Attorney General of the Republic, National Electoral Court and the State Controlling Institutions
The ministry has been called by different names over the course of its history. For instance, in 2014, President
Juan Orlando Hernández announced plans to eliminate the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights and merge it with the Ministry of Interior.[8][9] Certain sources refer to the Minister of Human Rights, Justice, Governance and Decentralization as the Secretariat.[10]
Established as early as 1826, the Ministry of Human Rights, Justice, Governance and Decentralization of Honduras was created from the territorial division of Honduras and was initially composed of seven departments. The ministry is responsible for matters pertaining to the internal government, which include the following:[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
The coordination, liaison, supervision and evaluation of the departmental and municipal regimes
Monitoring political parties with regard to their relationship with the government
Publishing laws, regulations and general provisions
The extrajudicial solution of conflicts and the coordination and liaison with the organs of the Judicial Power, Public Ministry, Attorney General of the Republic, National Electoral Court and the State Controlling Institutions
The ministry has been called by different names over the course of its history. For instance, in 2014, President
Juan Orlando Hernández announced plans to eliminate the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights and merge it with the Ministry of Interior.[8][9] Certain sources refer to the Minister of Human Rights, Justice, Governance and Decentralization as the Secretariat.[10]