This joint European Union and Council of Europe Project “Application of the European Convention on Human Rights and harmonisation of national legislation and judicial practice in Georgia in line with European Standards” aims to contribute to the enhancement of human rights protection in Georgia. The project envisages strengthening the criminal justice framework in line with European standards and enhancing the capacity of legal professionals to apply it at national level. The project is funded through the Programmatic Cooperation Framework for Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Republic of Moldova, Ukraine and Belarus.

 

Project Duration
1 July, 2015 – 31 December, 2018

 

Partners
Ministry of Justice, Chief Prosecutor’s Office, Supreme Court of Georgia, Tbilisi City Court, Regional Courts, High School of Justice, High Council of Justice, Georgian Bar Association

Who will benefit?

  • Georgian citizens who should enjoy improved equal rights and better protection of their human rights;
  • Judges, prosecutors and lawyers in Georgia who will be enabled to implement European Convention on Human Rights in their daily work;
  • Policy and decision makers.

How will the project work?

  • Through bilateral work as well as multilateral exchange of experience;
  • Special emphasis on common issues and special approach;
  • Emphasis on expertise, capacity building measures and tools.

Project activities:
- Development of recommendations for reforms and legal expertise;
- Study visits, training sessions, workshops, conferences;
- Translation of relevant materials into Georgian.

Retour Handover Ceremony of the HELP certificates

Handover Ceremony of the HELP certificates

20 assistants to judges received their certificates of completion of the HELP (Human Rights Education for Legal Professionals) course on Reasoning of Criminal Judgments on 17 December.

The participants completed a two-month intensive online course on Reasoning of Criminal Judgments which was a joint effort of the European Union, the Council of Europe and the High School of Justice. Participants were trained on key concepts of substantiation of court decisions based on the requirements of the European Convention of Human Rights. This free on-line course has been designed to address the needs of judges, who, in their National Courts, are required to reference the judgments and case-law of the European Court of Human Rights.

The trainings were organised in the framework of EU/CoE joint project “Strengthening the Application of the European Convention on Human Rights in Georgia”, within the EU-CoE Partnership for Good Governance.

17 December 2018
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