Header Grid Blocks

GTranslate

Shaping policy for development

An overview of Lagoro IDP camp in Kitgum District, northern Uganda, 20 May 2007. Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Wed, 05/22/2013 - 18:01 -- Anonymous (not verified)
Pilar Domingo
Pilar Domingo

Pilar Domingo

Research Fellow, Politics and Governance

Pilar Domingo joined ODI as Research Fellow in the Politics and Governance team in January of 2009. Previously she was at the Institute for the Study of the Americas of the University of London, and prior to that at the University of Salamanca in Spain. She has a D.Phil in Politics, and has published in the areas of: accountability, rule of law, and justice sector reform; rights-based citizenship and legal empowerment for vulnerable groups through rights claims; transitional justice, and democratization, institutional reform and state-building. Her region of expertise is Latin America.

Since joining ODI she has worked on a number of rights, governance and state-building issues, increasingly in connection to situations of fragility. She leads on work on rule of law and justice sector reform, and transitional justice processes.

Her recent work includes: contributing to OECD-DAC guidance on state-building in fragile states; leading a report on children and women's rights in Kenya under the new Constitution of 2010; research on justice and security reforms in fragile settings; the challenges of working with non-state actors and institutions in fragile settings.

Pilar's areas of expertise are rule of law and accountability; judicial reform and access to justice; citizenship, rights and legal voice; human rights and development; politics, state-building in fragile situations; democratization and institutional reform; human rights and transitional justice mechanisms; Latin American politics.

Outputs

The political economy of pre-trial detention

Publication - Research reports and studies - 21 February 2013
The objective of this paper is to develop an analytical framework that draws on political economy analysis (PEA) that can contribute to identifying the drivers of pre-trial detention. This can then be taken to country level to inform programming in ways that improve results.

Why politics matters: aid effectiveness and domestic accountability in the health sector - a comparative study of Uganda and Zambia

Publication - Discussion papers - 1 June 2012
This paper was part of International IDEA’s work on “Democracy and Development” in 2011. It was selected as a contribution to stimulate debate on and increase knowledge about the impact of democratic accountability on services. The study highlights the implications of aid for domestic accountability relationships.

Pages

Download CV
CV File: 
48.pdf

(pdf, 79.64k)

  • View content in the Search Centre:
  • Bolivia