Explore Data of Countries
Find out how people in different countries around the world experience justice. What are the most serious problems people face? How are problems being resolved? Find out the answers to these and more.
*GP – general population; *HCs – host communities; IDPs* – internally displaced persons
Justice Services
Innovation is needed in the justice sector. What services are solving justice problems of people? Find out more about data on justice innovations.
The Gamechangers
The 7 most promising categories of justice innovations, that have the potential to increase access to justice for millions of people around the world.
Justice Innovation Labs
Explore solutions developed using design thinking methods for the justice needs of people in the Netherlands, Nigeria, Uganda and more.
Creating an enabling regulatory and financial framework where innovations and new justice services develop
Rules of procedure, public-private partnerships, creative sourcing of justice services, and new sources of revenue and investments can help in creating an enabling regulatory and financial framework.
Forming a committed coalition of leaders
A committed group of leaders can drive change and innovation in justice systems and support the creation of an enabling environment.
Problems
Find out how specific justice problems impact people, how their justice journeys look like, and more.
Home Building Blocks Deciding
Parties that are locked together in conflict may find it difficult to agree on a resolution. Mediators can guide the problem-solving process, but they lack the authority to make decisions for parties who are unable or unwilling to compromise. When parties to conflict get stuck, or when one party’s rights have been violated, a neutral adjudicator who is familiar with the type of problem they are facing is needed to make a decision and move the process forward.
Conciliatory approaches to dispute resolution such as negotiation and mediation only go so far. Mediators and facilitators rely on the parties involved to brainstorm solutions and make decisions to resolve their conflict. This may not be possible or appropriate in disagreements that involve complex distributive issues, legal technicalities, or a power imbalance between the parties. Serious criminal cases, land grabbing or land ownership disputes, and domestic violence cases for example typically require intervention by a judge.
For this reason, it is important that parties have access to a trusted third party who can make informed decisions on their behalf and ensure that those decisions are enforced. Parties who lack access to a decision-maker and leave important disagreements unresolved run the risk of right being violated, violent escalation, or new conflicts later on.
In less complex disputes that can be resolved through negotiation and mediation, the threat of intervention by a third party decision-maker and the costs associated with that provide powerful incentives for parties to come to the table to talk things through.
Depending on the nature of the dispute, this may be a teacher, a parent, a boss, an arbitrator, a committee, a jury, or a judge. This person should be able to make decisions on technical issues and be available to the parties at a low cost.
Ideally, parties listen to one another and jointly grow towards a decision. Neutral third parties can facilitate this by giving them adequate time and space to participate and determine what they want (or can live with). When parties are unable to make a decision for themselves, third parties can use decision analysis2 and informed decision-making3 to do it for them.
Some amount of time pressure helps parties to reach reasonable decisions. That said, there should not be so time pressure much much that the decision-making process becomes stressful.
Ideally, negotiation, mediation, and adjudication are integrated and take place near each other. This allows parties to loop-back between different processes as needed. For example, from mediation to arbitration or vice versa.
In the heat of conflict, a third party decision-maker or the parties themselves may be tempted to impose a decision rather than growing towards a decision together. Decisions that do not address the underlying needs of those involved are unlikely to be sustainable, even if they are enforced.
The costs of involving a third party decision-making (court costs, time spent, and all the associated stress) are often prohibitively high. To ensure that parties reach out for help when needed, the total costs of litigation should not exceed 10-15% of the value at stake in the dispute. Simplifying and streamlining court procedures helps to bring down these costs and make decision-makers more accessible.
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Innovation of Law
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