MA submissions by Raymond Gavin
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This study will examine Liberia’s justice and security reform process, focusing on its recent and... more This study will examine Liberia’s justice and security reform process, focusing on its recent and original approach to decentralize justice and security service delivery in order to extend them nationally for the first time in the history of the Liberian state. It establishes relevant strengths and weaknesses of the regional justice and security hub model and the challenges that face it as the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) deployment and the Sirleaf presidential administration both draw to a close.
The study investigates the capacity of a decentralized but coherent approach to decrease fragility and tackle Liberia’s major internal justice and security problems. It explores its capacity for truly population-centric reform and its opportunity to act as a coordinating mechanism for a more hybrid network of actors. An underlying theme throughout is the contrasts of the conceptual framework against Liberia’s contextual reality, and the heavy influence of the historic development, disintegration and reform of the related state institutions on the population’s engagement with justice and security today.
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Non-academic by Raymond Gavin
Africa Policy Review, Oct 2015
Published in: Africa Policy Review, September 2015, Kempstone Media
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MA submissions by Raymond Gavin
The study investigates the capacity of a decentralized but coherent approach to decrease fragility and tackle Liberia’s major internal justice and security problems. It explores its capacity for truly population-centric reform and its opportunity to act as a coordinating mechanism for a more hybrid network of actors. An underlying theme throughout is the contrasts of the conceptual framework against Liberia’s contextual reality, and the heavy influence of the historic development, disintegration and reform of the related state institutions on the population’s engagement with justice and security today.
Non-academic by Raymond Gavin
The study investigates the capacity of a decentralized but coherent approach to decrease fragility and tackle Liberia’s major internal justice and security problems. It explores its capacity for truly population-centric reform and its opportunity to act as a coordinating mechanism for a more hybrid network of actors. An underlying theme throughout is the contrasts of the conceptual framework against Liberia’s contextual reality, and the heavy influence of the historic development, disintegration and reform of the related state institutions on the population’s engagement with justice and security today.