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Justice in Tunisia

The data on this page comes from a eJustice Needs and Satisfacton survey conducted by HiiL in Tunisia. We interviewed over 2500 randomly selected adults across the country in 2023. In 2024, we will be launching a report that gives a voice to the justice needs and experiences of millions of Tunisians.

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Experienced
legal problems
0 %
Took action to
resolve their problem
0 %
Completely or partially
resolved their problem
0 %
Number of people
interviewed in Tunisia
0

Photo by Ivan Soto Cobos

Below you will find the story of justice problems in everyday life of the people in Tunisia. They told us how the problems affect them, what they do to resolve them and how they experienced the formal and informal justice system.

This is the justice story as the people in Tunisia encounter and feels it.

Read more about the justice needs of people in Tunisia, below

How people experience justice in Tunisia

Have you encountered one or more legal problems?

A legal problem is a dispute, disagreement, or grievance that occurs in daily life and is resolved in the (formal or informal) law. It does not matter if the individual sees it as legal or whether she takes action to resolve it.

The chart shows how many adults in Tunisia encountered one or more legal problems in the last one year.

What is the demand for justice in Tunisia?

Every 4 years, 2.94 million people deal with legal problems. Some of them encounter multiple problems. On an annual basis, this amounts to 980K  people who need protection from the law to resolve a legal problem. 

A gap this big means that for every 100,000 people there are 11,441 individuals who must cope with one or more legal problems.

Which are the most frequent legal problems of people?

Problems related to social welfare, money, and neighbours are the biggest justice problems in Tunisia. Of all people who have had to deal with a legal problem, 25% have encountered a social welfare-related problem. 19% experienced a dispute related to money, and 18% experienced a dispute with neighbour.

Which are the six most frequent legal problems experienced by people in a year (in numbers)?

Problems related to neighbours, money, social welfare, employment, consumers and crime are justice problems that people are most likely to encounter in a year.

We derived the total number of problems people that are likely to experience in a given year for each justice problem by taking findings from the randomly selected sample and projecting them to the general population. In other words, we extrapolate the proportion of people who experienced a justice problem to the general population. So this graph reflects the prevalence of justice problems among the general population of Tunisia.  

Which are the most serious justice problems?

We asked people to tell us about the legal problem which they assess as most serious.

The problems are grouped into categories. For instance, crime aggregates experiences with property and violent crime, fraud and so on. 

Which are the most burdensome legal problems?

Which problems should be addressed first? The justice gap is enormous and policy-makers and service providers must focus resources on the most burdensome legal problems. 

To calculate the burden of a legal problem, we combined the impact and prevalence (frequency) of the problem. Legal problems that are both frequent and impactful have high burden scores. Impact and prevalence vary across key socio-demographic variables. Therefore in the chart, we let the users play and make their selections to see what are the most burdensome problems for specific groups.

Did you take action to resolve the problem?

When there is a legal problem, a well functioning legal system provides one or more dispute resolution mechanisms. We call the chains of these dispute resolution mechanisms justice journeys. 

The concept of a justice journey recognizes that there are many different steps to resolve a problem. Most often, these steps are not linear. The entirety of the steps that people take to resolve a problem is a justice journey.

Which are the paths to justice that people rely on?

The path to justice for people in Tunisia consists of more than one justice provider. In other words, people rely on a combination of justice providers to resolve their justice problems. This chart shows the proportion of Tunisians who rely on various justice providers. 

The chart also indicates where there is scope to integrate better processes or services. For example, since very few people rely on formal dispute resolution providers, it indicates a need for improvement in their services.  

How many people rely on the most commonly used providers of justice?

The above chart depicts the percentage of people who rely on each of the various providers of justice. In this chart, we estimate the total number of people who rely on the four most commonly used providers of justice.

Do legal problems reach resolutions in Tunisia?

The number of legal problems tells us about the size of the demand for justice but it is not enough to measure the total justice gap. To measure the justice gap, it is also important to understand whether these problems are converted into fair resolutions that help people to continue with their lives.

In Tunisia, 36% problems are in the process of resolution and 46% are not resolved at all.