Abstract :
In 2008, the Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor (CLEP), chaired
by Madeleine K. Albright and Hernando de Soto, published its report Making the
Law Work for Everyone. In this report, the CLEP argues ‘... that four billion people
around the world are robbed of the chance to better their lives and climb out of
poverty, because they are excluded from the rule of law’. The CLEP also develops
‘... a comprehensive agenda for legal empowerment encompassing four pillars
that must be central in national and international efforts to give the poor protection
and opportunities...: access to justice and the rule of law, property rights,
labour rights and business rights’. In this special section, which is edited and introduced
by Stephen Golub, the idea of legal empowerment of the poor in general,
and the report in particular, is discussed by Dan Banik, Julio Faundez, Jan Michiel
Otto and Matthew Stephens.