Study Overview
- Title:
- The contribution of legal awareness raising toward access to justice and stability in Afghanistan
- Study is 3ie funded:
- No
- Study ID:
- RIDIE-STUDY-ID-53750faee20a1
- Initial Registration Date:
- 05/15/2014
- Last Update Date:
- 01/26/2015
- Study Status:
- Completed
- Location(s):
- Afghanistan
- Abstract:
Over 30 years of war has left Afghanistan’s informal and formal justice institutions weakened, limiting access to equitable justice and effective dispute resolution. The Rule of Law Stabilization - Informal Component (RLS-I) addresses the primary objectives of (1) strengthening Traditional Dispute Resolution (TDR) mechanisms, including women’s roles in TDR as disputants, witnesses, and decision makers, (2) enhancing linkages between the formal and informal justice, and (3) facilitating the resolution of longstanding and destabilizing disputes. The RLS-I development hypothesis is that capacity-building of informal justice providers, combined with networking opportunities to share experience and build solidarity around improved TDR practices, strengthens stability through increased access to justice and citizen confidence in TDR mechanisms. This hypothesis is tested through a difference-in-differences (d-i-d) evaluation design that examines treatment and control groups both before and after the program.
- Registration Citation:
Killian, D. and Agee, J., The contribution of legal awareness raising toward access to justice and stability in Afghanistan. Registry for International Development for Impact Evaluations (RIDIE). Available at: 10.23846/ridie029
- Categories:
- Education
Social Protection
- Additional Keywords:
- Access to justice, Stability
- Secondary ID Number(s):
- AID-306-C-12-00013 (USAID)
Principal Investigator(s)
- Name of First PI:
- Dan Killian
- Affiliation:
- Checchi and Company Consulting
- Name of Second PI:
- James Agee
- Affiliation:
- Checchi and Company Consulting
Study Sponsor
- Name:
- USAID
- Study Sponsor Location:
- Afghanistan
Research Partner
- Name of Partner Institution:
- Strategic Social
- Type of Organization:
- Private firm
- Location:
- Afghanistan
Intervention Overview
- Intervention:
RLS-I’s program instructs participants on a variety of legal topics relevant to dispute prevention and conflict resolution through six legal education workshops courses conducted over the course of 4-6 months, for a total instruction time of approximately 30 hours. The program reaches approximately 125 male and female participants per district, with a target of at least 75 male elders attending all six courses and 40 females attending four courses. This target group encompasses a natural group of 30-40 district-level dispute resolvers, as well as other elders who would help resolve village or family level disputes. The program also provides a series of discussion sessions on pressing issues, coordination meetings with state justice actors, and plenary networking meetings to share lessons learned and encourage group action. RLS-I's intervention culminates with a handover network meeting for each district cohort, allowing participants to reflect on their participation, pledge not to follow cultural practices identified as harmful to their communities, and commit to advancing RLS-I objectives independently.
- Private Intervention Details:
- Theory of Change:
- Multiple Treatment Arms Evaluated?
- Yes
Implementing Agency
- Name of Organization:
- Checchi and Company Consulting
- Type of Organization:
- Private for profit organization
Program Funder
- Name of Organization:
- USAID
- Type of Organization:
- Public Sector, e.g. Government Agency or Ministry
Intervention Timing
- Intervention or Program Started at time of Registration?
- Yes
- Start Date:
- 10/01/2012
- End Date:
- 01/13/2014
Evaluation Method Overview
- Primary (or First) Evaluation Method:
- Difference in difference/fixed effects
- Other (not Listed) Method:
- Additional Evaluation Method (If Any):
- Other (not Listed) Method:
Method Details
- Details of Evaluation Approach:
A cross-section of elders and disputants in both program and non-program districts are surveyed at program inception and again at conclusion. Impact is then defined as the difference in mean scores on various measures from baseline to endline, and between the program group and non-program group. To the extent feasible, the same respondents from baseline are sought out at endline, thus allowing both group comparisons through a repeated cross-section design, and individual comparisons through a panel data set made up of the same respondents.
- Private Details of Evaluation Approach:
Assumptions underlying this theory of change include the following: a) workshop content effectively imparts knowledge, b) participants are willing and able to change their attitudes and practices that may conflict with Afghan statutory law and Shari’ah, c) participants will be able to use their new knowledge effectively in context, upon returning to their communities, d) participation will generate a critical mass of elders in a given community sufficient to effect change in adjudication reflective of Afghan statutory law, Shari’ah and human rights norms, e) improper influence and interference with informal dispute resolution by local power brokers will gradually lessen as a result of security and governance gains, f) threats from insurgent or anti-government actors fail to deter program participation, and g) the programming environment is stable enough to enable social change.
- Outcomes (Endpoints):
- Percent of TDR decisions recorded / registered with government entity (identified in self-reported survey data as well as auditing decision book records and district government files) - Percentage of elders reporting positive change in adjudication practices compared to previous year (survey pre and post) - Knowledge gain from baseline to endline, and across program and non-program groups (Constitutional law, criminal law, family law, inheritance, property / deeds law) - Attitudinal change from baseline to endline, and across program and non-program groups (harmful social practices, role of women in TDR) - Disputant perception of external influence over their dispute adjudication - Gains in disputant perceptual indices on the process and outcome of their dispute adjudication (procedural justice, corruption, and justice of outcome)
- Unit of Analysis:
- Results are analyed at the level of elders (knowledge and attitude) and by individual TDR event (disputant perception of the adjudication practices of the elders who helped resolve their dispute)
- Hypotheses:
The evaluation is organized around four key hypotheses: 1) The intervention leads to TDR decisions that better reflect Afghan law, Shari’ah, and human rights norms, 2) The intervention leads to TDR decisions and local adjudicators being perceived as more impartial, 3) The intervention will result in a decrease in the number of TDR decisions that negatively impact women and children, and 4) The intervention will result in an increased role for women in TDR processes as disputants, witnesses or decision-makers. In addition to the primary hypotheses, there are several secondary research questions of interest, such as the following: 1) What is the requisite exposure to RLS-I activities to effect behavior change? 2) What is the time frame governing any treatment effect, and for how long does it persist? 3) What is the requisite number of participants in a community to effect a change in dispute adjudication and outcomes in the community as a whole? 4) Do RLS-I activities for women provide an indirect means of affecting dispute prevention, adjudication, and outcomes? 5) Is the distinction between real and imposed adjudicators a meaningful one in the context of the intervention?
- Unit of Intervention or Assignment:
- Selection of program and non-program groups is first by district, and then by individuals within district
- Number of Clusters in Sample:
- The evaluation sampled 6 districts (3 treatment, 3 comparison), with each district sampling from approximately 35 villages. The average number of villages in a district is approximately 50.
- Number of Individuals in Sample:
- ~ 500 elders and 600 disputants for each data collection wave, or 70 elders and 90 disputants per district . For mass outreach, ~ 1,800 respondents for each data collection wave (300 per district).
- Size of Treatment, Control, or Comparison Subsamples:
- Treatment and comparison sub-groups are approximately evenly balanced across the total sample size
Supplementary Files
- Analysis Plan:
- RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report (26 March 2013).pdf
- Other Documents:
- : FINAL RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report.pdf
Outcomes Data
- Description:
- Elder survey, disputant survey, citizen survey
- Data Already Collected?
- Yes
- Data Previously Used?
- No
- Data Access:
- Not restricted - access with no requirements or minimal requirements (e.g. web registration)
- Data Obtained by the Study Researchers?
- Yes
- Data Approval Process:
- Approval Status:
Treatment Assignment Data
- Participation or Assignment Information:
- Yes
- Description:
- Data Obtained by the Study Researchers?
- Data Previously Used?
- Data Access:
- Data Obtained by the Study Researchers?
- Data Approval Process:
- Approval Status:
Data Analysis
- Data Analysis Status:
- Yes
Study Materials
- Upload Study Materials:
- : RLS-I elder interview (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
: RLS-I disputant case assessment (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
RLS-I Impact Evaluation Final Report: RLS-I Phase 3 FINAL Evaluation (Impact Assessment) Report_16 May 2014.pdf
RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report (26 March 2013).pdf
RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report: FINAL RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report.pdf
RLS-I Phase 2 Evaluation Report: RLS-I Phase 2 impact evaluation report (29 Aug 2012).pdf
RLS-I evaluation brief: RLS-I evaluation brief.pdfChange History for Upload Study MaterialsChanged On Previous Value 01/26/2015 Description:
Filename: RLS-I elder interview (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description:
Filename: RLS-I disputant case assessment (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report (26 March 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report
Filename: FINAL RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report.pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 2 Evaluation Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 2 impact evaluation report (29 Aug 2012).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I evaluation brief
Filename: RLS-I evaluation brief.pdf
Link: http://01/26/2015 Description:
Filename: RLS-I elder interview (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description:
Filename: RLS-I disputant case assessment (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: Final report - The contribution of legal awareness raising to access to justice and stability in Afghanistan
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Final Evaluation Report (11 April 2014).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report (26 March 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report
Filename: FINAL RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report.pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 2 Evaluation Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 2 impact evaluation report (29 Aug 2012).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I evaluation brief
Filename: RLS-I evaluation brief.pdf
Link: http://01/26/2015 Description:
Filename: RLS-I elder interview (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description:
Filename: RLS-I disputant case assessment (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: Final report - The contribution of legal awareness raising to access to justice and stability in Afghanistan
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Final Evaluation Report (11 April 2014).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report (26 March 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report
Filename: FINAL RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report.pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 2 Evaluation Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 2 impact evaluation report (29 Aug 2012).pdf
Link: http://01/26/2015 Description:
Filename: RLS-I elder interview (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description:
Filename: RLS-I disputant case assessment (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: Final report - The contribution of legal awareness raising to access to justice and stability in Afghanistan
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Final Evaluation Report (11 April 2014).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report (26 March 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report
Filename: FINAL RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report.pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 2 Evaluation Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 2 impact evaluation report (29 Aug 2012).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Evaluation Brief
Filename: RLS-I evaluation brief.pdf
Link: http://06/12/2014 Description:
Filename: RLS-I elder interview (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description:
Filename: RLS-I disputant case assessment (endline 5 Aug 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: Final report - The contribution of legal awareness raising to access to justice and stability in Afghanistan
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Final Evaluation Report (11 April 2014).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 3 Evaluation Inception Report (26 March 2013).pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report
Filename: FINAL RLS-I Phase 3 Baseline Evaluation Report.pdf
Link: http://
Description: RLS-I Phase 2 Evaluation Report
Filename: RLS-I Phase 2 impact evaluation report (29 Aug 2012).pdf
Link: http://
Registration Category
- Registration Category:
- Non-Prospective, Category 4: Data for measuring impacts have been obtained/collected by the research team and analysis for this evaluation has started
Completion Overview
- Intervention Completion Date:
- 03/13/2014
- Data Collection Completion Date:
- 09/30/2013
- Unit of Analysis:
- Elder knowledge and attitude, disputant perception of their dispute adjudication process and outcome, household perception of various TDR measures
- Clusters in Final Sample:
- None
- Total Observations in Final Sample:
- 850 elders, 996 disputants, 3820 citizens
- Size of Treatment, Control, or Comparison Subsamples:
- Elders: 425 treatment, 425 comparison Disputants: 472 treatment, 524 comparison Citizens: 1918 treatment, 1902 comparison
Findings
- Preliminary Report:
- No
- Preliminary Report URL:
- Summary of Findings:
- RLS-I elders gained an average of 12% in legal knowledge, with heterogeneous outcomes across different types of knowledge. Elders showed strong gains in practical and relevant knowledge in family and inheritance, but showed mild gains or even declines in knowledge such as constitutional rights they may not see in their communities or practiced by their district government. - Afghans seeking the mediation of RLS-I elders are 11% more satisfied with the procedural fairness and 8% more satisfied with overall justice of the outcome. - Citizens were 7% more likely to support alternatives to the practice of child marriages, and 4.6% more likely to affirm that giving away girls in marriage was not an effective solution to a dispute. -Households in RLS-I districts reported a 17% increase in women taking their disputes directly to the decision making body. Households were also 19% more likely to support the idea of women serving as dispute resolvers, and 24% more likely to support the idea of female dispute resolvers. - Female disputants report negative assessments of procedural fairness and justice of the outcome even as males report positive assessments on the same measures.
- Paper:
- No
- Paper Summary:
- Paper Citation:
Data Availability
- Data Availability (Primary Data):
- Yes--Available now
- Date of Data Availability:
- Data URL or Contact:
- Dan Killian, dkillian@me.com
- Access procedure:
Other Materials
- Survey:
- Yes
- Survey Instrument Links or Contact:
- See documents in Study Materials section of registryChange History for Survey Instrument Links or Contact
Changed On Previous Value 06/12/2014 See related program documents in registry
- Program Files:
- Yes
- Program Files Links or Contact:
- Dan Killian, dkillian@me.com
- External Link:
- External Link Description:
- Description of Changes:
Study Stopped
- Date:
- Reason: