The importance of building effective legal and regulatory systems has long been recognized by development professionals, yet there have been few programmatic initiatives that have translated empirical evidence and political intention into sustained policy success. A key reason is that such efforts have too often consisted of top-dow
It is observed in the Introduction of this special issue that the rule of law has been an integral p...
This paper seeks to demonstrate the need to bridge the gap between the economic and culture-based ap...
The purveyance of the rule of law in developing countries has frequently been associated with positi...
The importance of building effective legal and regulatory systems has long been recognized by develo...
Development assistance programs in the law and justice sector have traditionally focused on reformin...
In the early years of this century most of the legal and judicial reform work of International Devel...
This paper traces the evolution of the World Bank’s involvement in legal and judicial reform. Initia...
Three types of strategies have been common for court reform programmes: the ‘holistic’, the ‘tactica...
ABSTRACT This paper canvasses the theoretical and empirical literature con-cerning the role that leg...
In spite of the ubiquity of the phrase in contemporary development discourse and policy, there exist...
In the last decade bottom-up approaches to legal development cooperation have become increasingly po...
In the last decade bottom-up approaches to legal development cooperation have become increasingly po...
For nearly two decades, international organizations and bilateral donor agencies have been involved ...
This book examines why law and development has failed despite years of rule of law efforts pursued b...
Legal pluralism – as practice and theory – is frequently viewed as a functional response to the dive...
It is observed in the Introduction of this special issue that the rule of law has been an integral p...
This paper seeks to demonstrate the need to bridge the gap between the economic and culture-based ap...
The purveyance of the rule of law in developing countries has frequently been associated with positi...
The importance of building effective legal and regulatory systems has long been recognized by develo...
Development assistance programs in the law and justice sector have traditionally focused on reformin...
In the early years of this century most of the legal and judicial reform work of International Devel...
This paper traces the evolution of the World Bank’s involvement in legal and judicial reform. Initia...
Three types of strategies have been common for court reform programmes: the ‘holistic’, the ‘tactica...
ABSTRACT This paper canvasses the theoretical and empirical literature con-cerning the role that leg...
In spite of the ubiquity of the phrase in contemporary development discourse and policy, there exist...
In the last decade bottom-up approaches to legal development cooperation have become increasingly po...
In the last decade bottom-up approaches to legal development cooperation have become increasingly po...
For nearly two decades, international organizations and bilateral donor agencies have been involved ...
This book examines why law and development has failed despite years of rule of law efforts pursued b...
Legal pluralism – as practice and theory – is frequently viewed as a functional response to the dive...
It is observed in the Introduction of this special issue that the rule of law has been an integral p...
This paper seeks to demonstrate the need to bridge the gap between the economic and culture-based ap...
The purveyance of the rule of law in developing countries has frequently been associated with positi...