Fostering Citizen Participation in the Development of Legislation
Abstract
Participatory processes are critical to improving governance in post-conflict countries. Involving the public in creating legislation increases a government’s legitimacy and the likelihood that nascent democracies remain stable and continue to develop. Yet post-conflict societies, especially those unaccustomed to democracy, require extra support to open legislative and other policymaking processes. Part of a series that builds on a three-year field program on the role of women in Rwanda, this policy brief provides policymakers, donors, and program planners with strategies for the consolidation of democracy in post-conflict societies.
Citation
Gomez, Jessica and Carla Koppell. Fostering Citizen Participation in the Development of Legislation. Washington, DC: Inclusive Security, 2008.
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