Expanding alternative justice in Indigenous communities
In Mexico, we continue to document traditional practices of dialogue and reconciliation and to identify effective strategies for expanding justice in marginalized communities. This month, we hosted our second meeting of local judicial authorities and Indigenous mediators to elevate community-based centers of peace and dialogue. Each exchange deepens our collective commitment to preserving time-honored methods that place local voices at the heart of sustainable justice.
Partnering with justice leaders
In the Dominican Republic, we are collaborating with the Ministry of Justice to adopt a people-centered approach to improving justice delivery. This includes developing indicators to identify people’s justice needs and assessing how the justice system responds to those needs. We are also exploring ways to adapt our Open Justice Metric to support Dominican institutions by providing data-driven insights that enhance transparency and accountability in the country’s justice system.From local to global
These local and national efforts connect directly to our work on the global stage. This month, we contributed a chapter to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)16 Data Initiative’s annual report, highlighting the critical link between access to justice (SDG 16) and eradicating poverty (SDG 1).
We are actively engaged in shaping the groundbreaking Ibero-American Convention on Access to Justice, and our participation in in national and regional dialogues this November reinforces our commitment to a people-centered approach to justice in the region.
Additionally, with the support of the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and in partnership with OECD and HiiL we are developing a people-centered-justice indicator framework that can be scaled globally. |