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The WJP Rule of Law Index Alejandro Ponce The World Justice Project April, 2013

1. The WJP Rule of Law Index Alejandro Ponce The World Justice Project April, 2013. The WJP Rule of Law Index in a nutshell. 2. The ROL Index is a quantitative assessment tool designed to offer a comprehensive picture of the extent to which countries adhere to the rule of law in practice.

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The WJP Rule of Law Index Alejandro Ponce The World Justice Project April, 2013

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  1. 1 The WJP Rule of Law Index Alejandro Ponce The World Justice Project April, 2013

  2. The WJP Rule of Law Index in a nutshell 2 • The ROL Index is a quantitative assessment tool designed to offer a comprehensive picture of the extent to which countries adhere to the rule of law in practice. • Contribution: • Comprehensive definition of Rule of Law • New data: • Views and experiences of random ordinary people • Views and opinions of experts • Quantification of 48 rule of law outcomes in 97 countries obtained from more than 400 variables.

  3. Motivation • Consensus within the international community in support of the rule of law. • “Establishing respect for the rule of law is fundamental to achieving a durable peace in the aftermath of conflict, to the effective protection of human rights, and to sustained economic progress and development.” (United Nations) • Yet there is little agreement about what constitutes the rule of law and what its current status is

  4. Challenges in defining the rule of law • Thin vs. thick • Ends vs. means • Western tradition

  5. WJP Rule of Law Index

  6. WJP Rule of Law Index Checks State Duties

  7. Measurement Approach 8 • Perspective of the ordinary person: • Two sources of entirely new data: • A general population poll (GPP): Probability sample - 1,000 respondents per country (three largest cities). • Qualified respondent’s questionnaires (QRQ): Completed by in-country experts in civil and commercial law; criminal justice; labor law; and public health. • Botero J. and Ponce A., Measuring the Rule of Law. WJP Working Paper # 1 (2011). Available on-line at: www.worldjusticeproject.org

  8. Examples of questions • In the last 3 years, have you or someone in your household, been subjected to physical abuse by the police or the military? [If yes] Did you or anyone else report the crime to the police or other authority? (GPP) • Assume that a poor person is arrested on suspicion of aggravated robbery. Assume that the suspect is taken into custody and detained at a local police station in the city where you live. How likely is it that the police interrogators inflict minor physical harm on the detained suspect to admit the crime? (QRQ)

  9. Measurement Approach 10

  10. Building the scores 11 400 variables 48 sub-factors and 9 factors

  11. 8. Effective criminal justice Building the scores • 8.1 Criminal investigation is effective. • 8.2 Criminal adjudication system is timely and effective • 8.7 Due process of law and the rights of the accused. • - Presumption of innocence • Arrest and pre-trial detention • Torture and abusive treatment to suspects • Legal representation • Access to translators • Evidence • Rights of prisoners 30 questions

  12. Validity checks 14 • Face validity • Rely on several variables • Include the assessments of experts in different disciplines and the general public • Check our results against qualitative and quantitative third party sources. • Sensitivity analysis to assess how variation in the assumptions (including missing data, weighting, normalization, or aggregation) and the samples can alter our estimates

  13. Acknowledging limitations 15 1) Definition: • Different definitions and value structures (Uwa community in Colombia). • Different legal architectures (Parliamentary democracy, presidential democracy, kingdom). • Different goals (e.g. Criminal system: Retribution and deterrence in USA; rehabilitation and social harmony in Japan). 2) Measurement: • Cross-cultural differences. • Sensitive questions. • Measurement error. 3) Sampling: Rural vs. urban.

  14. Rule of law in the world • Aggregate rule of law score

  15. Rule of law and GDP per capita

  16. Civil justice in the U.S.

  17. Civil justice in the U.S.

  18. Eastern Europe and Central Asia Estonia: Ranks in the top 20 in 7 dimensions Russia: Deficiencies in checks and balances (92/97) Turkey: 39th out of 97 in regulatory enforcement, 76th in fundamental rights • Aggregate rule of law score

  19. Bribery in Sub-Saharan Africa Did you (or the person living in your household) have to pay a bribe in order to receive medical attention at any Public hospital or clinic?

  20. Accountability Source: The World Justice Project Rule of Law Index 2012-2013

  21. A tool for discussing country-specific findings

  22. Colombia: Argument for reform • Colombia, November 15, 2010: “(...) Another important organization that promotes justice around the world, the World Justice Project, just released its report entitled Rule of Law Index, and it includes Colombia… If we review the area of access to justice, we find that we get a score very close to zero on the effectiveness of the criminal investigation system… these reports, that are known on a global scale, must make us turn on our alarms.  You—the judiciary—and us—the government—together with Congress, must put all our effort to achieving a more efficient and effective criminal justice system.” Juan Manuel Santos, President of Colombia

  23. Mexico: Delivery of Justice 26

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  25. For more information and data, please visit our website: www.worldjusticeproject.org • Thank you

  26. WJP Rule of Law Index 29

  27. Definitions: Rachel Kleinfeld "Competing definitions of the Rule of Law" • Government bound by law • Equality before the law • Law and order • Predictable, efficient justice • Lack of state violation of human rights

  28. Statistical tests of the WJP Rule of Law Index • Statistical Tests on the WJP Rule of Law Index • In summary, “the JRC analysis suggests that the conceptualized multi-level structure of the WJP Rule of Law Index is statistically coherent and no dimension is dominated by any of its underlying components. Country ranks across the eight dimensions are also fairly robust to methodological changes related to the estimation of missing data, weight, or aggregation rule (less than ± 1 position shift in 90% of all cases).” • Saisana, M., and Saltelli, A., ‘Statistical Tests on the WJP Rule of Law Index 2011’. http://worldjusticeproject.org/sites/default/files/jrcaudit_wjpindex2011.pdf • Saisana, M., and Saltelli, A., ‘Rankings and Ratings: Instructions for Use’,Hague Journal on the Rule of Law, 2011, Volume 3, Issue 2. http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=ROL&volumeId=3&issueId=02&iid=8394462#

  29. Middle East and North Africa • Discrimination against women and religions minorities remains an area of concern Imagine that the local police detain two persons equally suspected of committing a crime. In your opinion, which of the following characteristics would place one of them at a disadvantage?

  30. Latin America & the Caribbean

  31. Sanctions for misconduct in LAC • Latin America, as a region, achieves the second lowest score in factor 1.5 “Government officials are sanctioned for misconduct” • Example: Assume that a high-ranking government officer is taking government money for personal benefit and one of his employees witnesses this conduct, reports it to the relevant authority, and provides sufficient evidence to prove it. Assume that the press obtains the information and publishes the story. Which one of the following outcomes is most likely? (data for Mexico)

  32. Factor 7: Civil Justice 55% of Chinese respondents answered that judges decide most cases according to “What the government tells them to do”. www.worldjusticeproject.org

  33. Middle East and North Africa

  34. Latin America & the Caribbean Venezuela is the weakest performer in the region Mexico: Weak in corruption, security, and criminal justice Chile and Uruguay rank in the top 25 in five dimensions Brazil: Best performer among BRIC countries, but crime is high • Aggregate rule of law score

  35. Sub-Saharan Africa Corruption is a problem throughout the region Zimbabwe: Deficiencies in checks and balances (96/97) Ghana ranks first among low-income countries in four dimensions Botswana ranks first in the region in seven dimensions and top 25 globally in six. • Aggregate rule of law score

  36. South Asia

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