The strengthening of judicial independence in Central America: an assesment after twenty years of reforms
Abstract During the last two decades, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala and Costa Rica have applied a variety of reforms with the target of deepening and strengthening judicial independence. So many changes have ocurred, like the reform of judge’s nomination and selection mechanisms, the promulgation of a constitutional minimum for the judicial budget, the introduction of the judicial careers, and more. However, in spite of the reforrns and the democratic environment of judge’s offices, the general perception is that judiciary is inefficient, corrupt, and uncapable of fighting the corruption. This article seeks to answer the question of why judicial independence’s reforms haven’t reach the expected outcomes.
- Referencias
- Cómo citar
- Del mismo autor
- Métricas
Díaz Rivillas, B., & Linares Lejarraga, S. (2020). The strengthening of judicial independence in Central America: an assesment after twenty years of reforms. América Latina Hoy, 39, 47–96. https://doi.org/10.14201/alh.22764
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Borja Díaz Rivillas, Política exterior de los EE.UU. hacia Colombia: el paquete de ayuda de 1.300 millones de dólares de apoyo al Plan Colombia y la Región Andina , América Latina Hoy : Vol. 31 (2002): Nuevos espacios para las relaciones internacionales
Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
+
−