The gavel is sometimes used in
courts of law and
courts of equity in the United States and, by
metonymy, is used there to represent the entire
judiciary system, especially of
judgeship. On the other hand, in the
Commonwealth of Nations, including the United Kingdom, and
Ireland, gavels have never been used by judges, despite many American-influenced TV programs depicting them. An exception is the
Inner London Crown Court, where
clerks use a gavel to alert parties in court of the entrance of the judge into the courtroom, as opposed to the usual practice of the judge knocking on the door before entering. Gavels are also used for judicial purposes in some other countries. In
Poland, they were originally used in the courts of the
Second Republic, a practice which was inherited from courts of partitioned Poland. Their use ceased after the
Second World War, but they were returned to courts in 2008, as an optional addition to a courtroom. ==United States Congress gavels==