This is the second part in a series of three In Briefs highlighting findings from the Solomon Islands Access to Justice Survey commissioned by the Solomon Islands government and supported by the Australian government and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP 2019a). The findings are drawn from the Survey Summary Report (UNDP 2019b). The survey assessed justice needs and barriers to effective dispute resolution, particularly among groups recognised as having unmet justice needs, including women and people with disabilities. This In Brief highlights key survey findings concerning perceptions of access to justice. Interested readers should consult the main study reports.Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trad
I, Dayna Lazarides, am in my last semester of my Bachelor of Laws degree. In the first years of my d...
In this critical period of transition, the most important thing that the Australian government and o...
Solomon Islands remains underdeveloped despite decades of development assistance. I argue this is du...
Solomon Islands’ law and justice sector has received substantial donor support in the two decades si...
Overall in Solomon Islands, foreign aid donors have neither engaged effectively with transitional ju...
From 1998 to 2003, the Solomon Islands found itself in the grip of 'the Tensions', a violent civil c...
Modern interventions focused on state building usually incorporate some mechanisms for transitional ...
Modern interventions focused on state building usually incorporate some mechanisms for transitional ...
There has been considerable debate over the past few years about the Australian Government’s focus o...
This article examines the challenges experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in...
This In Brief is based on the National Perceptions Survey on Peacebuilding for Solomon Islands commi...
Solomon Islands is a chain of 922 islands in the South Pacific, spread over 1,450kms from Bougainvil...
This In Brief contributes to a discussion of access to justice, and legal practices in Papua New Gui...
Are regional communities disadvantaged in the administration of the law, compared with their metropo...
This In Brief is the first in a two-part series that discusses a critical aspect of the Solomon Isla...
I, Dayna Lazarides, am in my last semester of my Bachelor of Laws degree. In the first years of my d...
In this critical period of transition, the most important thing that the Australian government and o...
Solomon Islands remains underdeveloped despite decades of development assistance. I argue this is du...
Solomon Islands’ law and justice sector has received substantial donor support in the two decades si...
Overall in Solomon Islands, foreign aid donors have neither engaged effectively with transitional ju...
From 1998 to 2003, the Solomon Islands found itself in the grip of 'the Tensions', a violent civil c...
Modern interventions focused on state building usually incorporate some mechanisms for transitional ...
Modern interventions focused on state building usually incorporate some mechanisms for transitional ...
There has been considerable debate over the past few years about the Australian Government’s focus o...
This article examines the challenges experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in...
This In Brief is based on the National Perceptions Survey on Peacebuilding for Solomon Islands commi...
Solomon Islands is a chain of 922 islands in the South Pacific, spread over 1,450kms from Bougainvil...
This In Brief contributes to a discussion of access to justice, and legal practices in Papua New Gui...
Are regional communities disadvantaged in the administration of the law, compared with their metropo...
This In Brief is the first in a two-part series that discusses a critical aspect of the Solomon Isla...
I, Dayna Lazarides, am in my last semester of my Bachelor of Laws degree. In the first years of my d...
In this critical period of transition, the most important thing that the Australian government and o...
Solomon Islands remains underdeveloped despite decades of development assistance. I argue this is du...