SHIFTING THE LEGAL BORDERLANDS OF RULE OF LAW PROGRAMS - BRAZILIAN COOPERATION AGENCY (ABC) AND PUBLIC DEFENDERS’ OFFICE IN EAST TIMOR

Authors

  • Sapna Reheem Shaila Doctoral Candidate, King's College London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21783/rei.v5i2.376

Keywords:

Rule of Law programs, Legal Pluralism, South-South Cooperation, Brazilian Cooperation Agency (ABC), East Timor, Public Defenders’ Office

Abstract

In this paper the author argues that the traditional international legal assistance (coined ‘rule of law’ assistance) follows a global template- sourced on the legal orders of countries that constitute the Global North.  Under the rule of law (RoL) programs - legal procedures and institutions that are same as the donor nations are transferred to the recipient nations.  This is because formal laws and institutions are seen as fundamental for economic prosperity and stability, and ‘copy-pasted’ as solutions separated from contexts. But in recent years with the emergence of non-traditional donors under the ‘South- South’ cooperation, following an approach of ‘mutual cooperation’ has challenged the traditional mode of international assistance on the RoL.  These countries accommodate the existence of legal pluralism, as well as adopt a slower and prolonged approach by building networks with local stakeholders drawing on their post-colonial and development trajectories. Using the case study of Brazilian legal assistance through the ABC in East Timor within the Public Defenders’ Office, the author shows how non-traditional international donors has subverted the traditional model of ‘rule of law’ assistance. This paper bridges the gap between the scholarship on the South - South cooperation within development studies and the legal scholarship on law and development focusing on the rule of law reforms. Using empirical data, the paper demonstrates the distinctive approaches undertaken by the Brazilian international actors within East Timor by underlining how dominant rule of law reforms push crucial local interests to the borders/peripheries. Further, this paper poses questions on the universality of the rule of law reforms advocated by traditional donors by demonstrating the emergence of peripheral interests from the engagement of donors from the Global South.

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Author Biography

Sapna Reheem Shaila, Doctoral Candidate, King's College London

Third year PhD candidate at Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London and supervised by Professor David Nelken. She completed her LLM in Law, Development and Governance from SOAS with a distinction and was awarded the Best Performing Student 2014-2015. Sapna worked as  a Research Associate for  Centre for Small States, QMUL in 2017,  under Dr. Caroline Morris.She is also a Visiting Lecturer for Law of Tort at King’s College.

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Published

2019-10-06

How to Cite

Shaila, S. R. (2019). SHIFTING THE LEGAL BORDERLANDS OF RULE OF LAW PROGRAMS - BRAZILIAN COOPERATION AGENCY (ABC) AND PUBLIC DEFENDERS’ OFFICE IN EAST TIMOR. JOURNAL OF INSTITUTIONAL STUDIES, 5(2), 747–776. https://doi.org/10.21783/rei.v5i2.376

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Section

Artigos Internacionais