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We engage advocates from across the globe and from multiple work disciplines to advance the rule of law.

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Related Posts

The First 48 Hours

In Mexico, eyewitness misidentifications and false confessions are the types of evidence most frequently used in criminal cases. To address this problem, Lawyers with Cameras carried out inmate and ...

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Street Law Zambia Legal Education Pilot Program

Zambia faces many systemic challenges to strengthening the rule of law as it relates to police brutality, police corruption and accountability, and gender-based violence. As the first step towards ...

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Myanmar Legal Profession Support Initiative

Justice Base, which set up an office in Myanmar in October 2012, will, in 2013, implement a project designed to build the capacity of local lawyers who represent clients in Myanmar’s courts.

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Establishing an Effective Detention Monitoring Structure in the Deep South of Thailand

Violent conflict in Thailand’s southernmost provinces has led the state to implement special security laws that have resulted in torture and inhumane conditions in detention centers. In order to ...

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China Migrant Justice Project

The Migrant Justice Project was designed to address migrant workers’ fundamental rights and expand Justice Venture International’s outreach to migrant workers in Beijing. Program activities included ...

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Keep Calm and Hack Bribes

Through the creation of an interactive website for reporting bribe requests, Bribe Hackers is serving as a bridge between law enforcement and victims of Bribery in India. In addition to building a ...

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The Rule of Law Index: an Action Planning Tool for Global Civil Society

One of the intended uses of the WJP Rule of Law Index is as an action planning tool for global civil society. The Rule of Law Index truly comes alive when citizens are given the opportunity to analyze information and shape implementation with their own aspirations and situational context.

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Guest post

Violence, Poor Governance, and the Social Contract Void

The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) is going through historic political, social, and identity transitions. There are five dynamics catalyzing these transitions, including the widening embrace of violence by both state and non-state actors to pursue socio-religious and political agendas and a push for new governance structures without the requisite institutions and social contract.

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Beatrice Mtetwa: Arrested Developments in Zimbabwe's Rule of Law

With the country’s hopes pinned upon presidential and parliamentary elections scheduled for July, the arrest of prominent human rights lawyer and activist Beatrice Mtetwa the day of a sweeping referendum on a new constitution has Zimbabwe’s promising present looking more and more like Robert Mugabe ten years ago.

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Guest post

Program on Rights and Justice in Cambodia (PRAJ)

The Justice Rising Blog aims to highlight grassroots projects that are striving to advance the rule of law. If you would like to highlight your project or organization, send us an email at [email protected]! Name Of Organization: East-West Management Institute, funded by USAID Project Title:  Program on Rights and Justice in Cambodia II (PRAJ II) Project Location:  Cambodia

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Guest post

Community and Detainee Reconciliation in Liberian Localities (C-DRILL)

The Justice Rising Blog aims to highlight grassroots projects that are striving to advance the rule of law. If you would like to highlight your project or organization, send us an email at [email protected]! Name of Organization: East-West Management Institute, in partnership with Prison Fellowships Liberia, funded by USAID Project Title: Community and Detainee Reconciliation in Liberian Localities (C-DRILL)

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Guest post

Women With Disabilities and the Justice System: Rights Without Remedies

One example of how society has come to view gender and disability is demonstrated by the iconographic historical symbol of justice, the blindfolded Lady Justice.

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Guest post

Malawi: Communities Under Siege

With many people in low income countries denied the right to be heard, access to justice and equality under the law - fundamental and constitutional rights - it is not surprising to see individuals from affected communities taking matters into their own hands. In my country, Malawi, weak, unaccountable, and unresponsive legal institutions have led to groups of people standing up to protect what belongs to them.

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Guest post

Gender Justice: The Entry Point to Reforming the Post 2015 Development Agenda

There are important evidence-based studies that have shown, not least through the work of BRAC and Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, that by investing in and focusing on women as the centre of development interventions we achieve multi-layered levels of progress which rapidly spread from the household to the community and to the State level. These are also the interventions which have the most long lasting impact. When a woman is helped to recognize her own agency, and when her own justice seeking behavior increases, the behavior of the whole household changes.

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Re-Imagining the Relationship of Citizens to Power-Holders Through “Accountapreneurship”

Spending time on the ground in countries like Liberia and Nepal, it soon becomes clear that despite good intentions, we still have very little idea how best to support the accountability of power-holders to citizens. There are hundreds of organizations working on corruption, transparency and accountability (words which are themselves confused and used inter-changeably); but the combined effect of these efforts is still much less than the sum of its parts.

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Guest post

A Look Back: Two Years of Egyptian Polarization

Last Friday marked the second anniversary of Egypt’s January 25th revolution, which toppled former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. Yet the weekend’s celebration has been marred by five straight days of clashes between opposition protesters and security forces.

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Guest post

Customary Justice: Challenges, Innovations and the Role of the UN

Interest in informal legal systems has grown in recent years with greater emphasis being placed on local ownership as an effective means of development. Non-state justice systems, including indigenous, customary, and religious legal orders; alternative dispute resolution mechanisms; and popular justice fora are often the only avenues through which the masses can access justice. Customary justice systems (CJS) provide access to justice for marginalised or impoverished communities that may otherwise have no other options for redress.

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Guest post

Strengthening National Capacity to Prosecute Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity & War Crimes

The capacity of national justice sector institutions to prosecute the perpetrators of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes is one of the greatest challenges to national rule of law initiatives within the context of peace and security. Approximately 60% of States Parties of the International Criminal Court (ICC) are yet to adapt their national legal framework to the cooperation requirements, crimes and modes of liability defined by the ICC Statute. Positive Complementarity is the most important conceptual insight to address this.

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