Making the Law Work for Everyone
Author: Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor, UNDP
Date: 2008
Size:
110 pages
(1.7 MB)
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How can legal empowerment reduce poverty? This report from the Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor explores the relationship between poverty and access to justice. Four billion people cannot better their lives because they are excluded from the rule of law, their work and assets insecure and unprotected. A renewed anti-poverty agenda is needed to include the majority of the world's population in the systems of rights and obligations that foster prosperity.
The Commission identifies four 'pillars' of legal empowerment reform required at the centre of national and international efforts to provide protection and opportunities for the poor. These are access to justice and the rule of law, property rights, labour rights and business rights. In a comprehensive agenda, the four pillars of legal empowerment reinforce each other. Effective institutions and laws give individuals the confidence to cooperate with others over time and distance, thereby steadily creating wealth. Productivity gains released through reform in one area carry over into others.
To succeed, legal empowerment has to lead to systemic change, including institutional reform. Successful approaches are likely to involve:
The Commission makes a number of recommendations to the international community, civil society and other local and regional organisations. These include:
Access full text: available online
Source:
UNDP, 2008, 'Making the Law Work for Everyone', Volume 1, Report of the Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor, United Nations Development Programme, New York
Author:
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), http://www.undp.org/