Croatian lawyer and politician
Miroslav Šeparović (born 18 July 1958) is a Croatian lawyer who serves as the 5th President of the Constitutional Court of Croatia since 13 June 2016,[1] had previously served as a 5th Minister of Justice in the Cabinet of Zlatko Mateša from 1995 to 1998.
Early life and education
Miroslav Šeparović was born on 18 July 1958 in Blato[2] on the island of Korčula where he finished elementary and high school.[citation needed]
He graduated law from the Zagreb Faculty of Law in 1981. He passed the bar exam in 1983, and notary exam in 1994. He earned his PhD from the same Faculty in 2013 with a thesis entitled, The welfare of the child and the principle of the best interests of the child in the practice of the European Court of Human Rights and the Croatian Constitutional Court.[1][3]
Career
After graduation, Šeparović worked as a legal clerk in the Blato Winery in Zagreb (1981-1983), and then in the Military building institution Prečko (1984-1986). In 1986, he was appointed judge of the Municipal Court in Zagreb. In 1989, Šeparović got employed in the Ministry of Justice where he worked in the Directorate for Property and Legal Affairs. In 1995, he was appointed Minister. As a Minister, Šeparović participated in the drafting and implementation of regulations in the areas of civil law, the judicial system and criminal law reform. In 1998, he got a job at the Croatian Intelligence Service and become deputy head of the National Security Office. Since year 2000, he worked in private practice as a lawyer. He also served as a defender of general Mladen Markač at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. On 14 April 2009, Croatian Parliament appointed him judge of the Constitutional Court.[1]
Other
Šeparović is a member of the Croatian Academy of Legal Sciences.
Awards
He was awarded the Order of the Croatian Trefoil, Homeland War Memorial Medal, Homeland's Gratitude Medal, Memorial Medal Vukovar and the Order of Duke Branimir.
Controversy
In 2018, Committee on Ethics in Science and Higher Education (CESHE) concluded that Šeparović was guilty of plagiarism since his doctoral thesis contained repeated instances of “incomplete and opaque citations” of other people’s work.
In response, Šeparović filed criminal complaints against all the five members of the CESHE because he thought that the Committee members misused their positions and overstepped the jurisdiction which was limited by the Constitutional Court in 2017. Whereas, CESHE chairman Ivica Vilibić considered that it was a new development in an ongoing effort to weaken the Committee.[4][5]
References