Jump to content

World Justice Project

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kam2th (talk | contribs) at 20:17, 6 January 2010. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.


World Justice Project
AbbreviationWJP
TypeNGO
Legal status501(c)(3)
PurposeRule of Law
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
Region served
Worldwide
Official language
English, French, Spanish, Japanese, Eastern Mandarin, Russian, Arabic, Turkish
Founder & CEO
William H. Neukom
WebsiteWorld Justice Project


The World Justice Project was created as sub-section of the American Bar Association in 2007. The organization is also known by its initials, the WJP. The organization transitioned into a free standing non-profit in September of 2009 and is based out of Washington, DC. The WJP's main goal is to promote adherence to the Rule of Law throughout the world.


Rule of Law Index

The Rule of Law Index is a tool designed by the Wold Justice Project team to measure countries' adherence to the Rule of Law. It is a comprehensive tool that measures nations' performance on 16 factors and 68 sub-factors. To date 35 countries have been covered by the Rule of Law Index, accounting for 45% of the world's population. The countries covered so far include: Albania, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bolivia, Bulgaria, Canada, Colombia, Croatia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, France, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Japan, Jordan[1], Kenya, Liberia, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, and the United States.[2]

Major Accomplishments

The World Justice Forum II
Held in Vienna, Austria on November 11-14th 2009, the WJP organized a forum of global participants who gathered to discuss and organize action-oriented plans to increase the influence of the Rule of Law. The Forum was attended by 312 participants coming from 84 countries.[3]

The Opportunity Fund
The WJP Opportunity Fund was established to support action-oriented programs that resulted from ideas generated during the first World Justice Forum in 2008. The Fund is currently supporting 36 programs spanning all the world's continents. These programs are multi-disciplinary and aim to promote rule of law through a total of 17 disciplines, including: Architecture, Arts, Business, Education, Engineering, Environment, Faith, Government, Human Rights, Judiciary, Labor, Law, Media, Military, Public Health, Public Safety & Law Enforcement, and Science.[4]

Mainstreaming
The WJP has made it part of their mission to promote international and local collaboration in order to promote the Rule of Law. To accomplish this, the organization has held several regional meetings to bring together professionals and academics from a variety of disciplines in the interests of supporting continuous dialogue. The WJP has held five regional meetings since its creation to focus on the particular issues facing each area. These conferences have taken place in Washington, DC, Accra (Ghana), Buenos Aires, Prague, and Singapore. In addition, the WJP has also held a multitude of domestic mainstreaming meetings in more than 20 states within the United States of America.

References