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Final Report of the Commission
Outcome
Document from the Fifth
Commission Meeting Summary of Proceedings from the
Third Commission Meeting January
2007 - June 2006 - During the
course of the second full meeting of the Commission on Legal
Empowerment of the Poor on June 6 - 7th , 2006, Co-Chairs Madeleine
Albright and Hernando de Soto, along with Commission Members and the
Secretariat, established a concrete plan for how to move Legal
Empowerment’s work beyond concept and into action. Working
Groups were defined, further regional consultations planned, and a
roadmap for the life of Legal Empowerment drawn up. Agreed Principles and Conceptual Framework February 2006 - Following
the first full meeting of the Commission on Legal Empowerment of the
Poor on January 20-21 2006, Co-Chairs Madeleine Albright and Hernando
de Soto collaborated closely with the Secretariat to produce this
document, which outlines key conceptual issues, next steps and proposed
outcomes for Legal Empowerment. Several Commission Members
also contributed substantively to the drafting of this consensus
statement. INDONESIA TANZANIA KENYA UGANDA EUROPE/CENTRAL ASIA SOUTH AMERICA December 11-12, 2006 Sao Paulo, Brazil
Launching DocumentsOverview of Informality & Thematic Position PapersPapers presented to the First Commission Meeting January 2006 - In
preparation for the first meeting of the Commission on Legal
Empowerment of the Poor, the Secretariat drafted an initial
general overview paper, which offers a broad outline of issues that are
critical to any discussion of reforms around legal protection. It is
neither exhaustive nor definitive. Rather, it offers top-line insights
on informality, and its link to poverty, drawn from global reform
programs and other research. It also provides context to facilitate and
focus the discussion on some of the complex questions Legal Empowerment
faces at the outset of its mandate. The Secretariat also invited Commission members and
relevant experts to contribute draft position papers on subjects
relevant to Legal Empowerment’s goals. Four papers were
submitted. Concept Paper September 2005 - On the 6th
of September 2005, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden,
Canada, Egypt, Guatemala, Tanzania, and the United Kingdom, in
co-operation with UNDP and the UN Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE), launched a proposal calling for the creation of the first
international initiative focused specifically on the link between the
informal economy and poverty. To do so, they drafted a document broadly
outlining the problem of informality and the desired objectives of what
has become the Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor.
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| © 2007 Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor – Click here for © photo credits. |
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