The best laid schemes… gang aft a-gley: judicial reform in Latin America - evidence from Costa Rica

  • Bruce M. Wilson
    University of Central Florida bwilson[at]mail.ucf.edu
  • Juan Carlos Rodríguez Cordero
    Consorcio Jurídico Metropolitano
  • Roger Handberg
    University of Central Florida

Abstract

Starting in the 1980s, and accelerating through lic 1990s, international financial institutions (IFIs), non-governmental organizations (NGO5) and development agencies funnelled considerable resources into judicial reform and rule of law programmes in virtually every Latin American and Caribbean country. The assumption was that reformed court systems would foster free market economic development strategies. This article examines the impact of two frequently advocated aspects of judicial reform, judicial access and judicial independence, on econornic policy making in Costa Rica. We argue that there is a potentially significant disjuncture between the sponsors’ expectations of the judicial reforms’ economic impact and the observed outcomes.
  • Referencias
  • Cómo citar
  • Del mismo autor
  • Métricas
Wilson, B. M., Rodríguez Cordero, J. C., & Handberg, R. (2020). The best laid schemes… gang aft a-gley: judicial reform in Latin America - evidence from Costa Rica. América Latina Hoy, 39, 97–123. https://doi.org/10.14201/alh.22765

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
+