The Supreme Administrative Court of the Slovak Republic has published a comprehensive report on its activities over the past five years

The Supreme Administrative Court of the Slovak Republic has published a yearbook, which covers the first five years since the court’s establishment, namely 2021–2025. This comprehensive publication provides an overview of the Supreme Administrative Court’s adjudicative activities and the supporting functions of its Chancellery, as well as a holistic view of administrative justice in Slovakia.

In the introduction to the publication, readers will find, among other things, interesting interviews with the institution’s presidency, the President of the Constitutional Court of the Slovak Republic, and judges emeritus. As for the judges, in addition to an article devoted to associate judges, special attention is given primarily to statements and information about all 23 judges who were serving at this court at the end of 2025.

The retrospective look at the entire history of administrative justice in Slovakia did not go unnoticed either, with particular emphasis placed on the most important milestones that led to the establishment of this court as one of the goals of a far-reaching judicial reform that had been in the works for years.

A large part of the publication is then devoted to the court’s adjudicative activity itself, taking into account individual areas of jurisdiction and citing specific landmark rulings that illustrate the complexity of the decision-making process. This complexity is further captured in figures through current and detailed statistical data. Specifically, these data pertain to the court’s adjudicative activities, trends in and reductions of the duration of proceedings, and the work of the analytical department.

The yearbook also provides a relatively detailed account of the activities of the Chancellery, as a support unit of the court. In addition to information about judicial assistants and other staff members, the yearbook includes details on signed memoranda, training, the library, communication policy, and the handling of information requests. The text section on cooperation with both international and Slovak institutions is supplemented by several related photographs.

This publication is part of an open and transparent communication policy, which has been one of the presidency’s priorities since this court was established. One of the publication’s goals is to provide anyone interested in the Supreme Administrative Court with a quick overview of its history, from its inception through the end of the term of its first president, Pavol Naď. The main purpose of the yearbook is to offer a modern publication in which readers can find, in a concise and clear format, the most important information about one of the highest courts.