About the project

The main objective is to assist Moldovan authorities to improve the functioning of the justice system through strengthened efficiency and quality of courts, and a better system of enforcement of court decisions.

To this end, it will support the implementation of a system for monitoring the progress of judicial reforms and to allow the adoption of justice sector policies based on objective information about the workload and performance of courts. Other objectives are improving the collection, reporting and analysis of data on the efficiency and quality of the courts and of the enforcement system, and consolidating the mechanisms for judicial transparency and accountability.

The project is co-funded by the European Union and the Council of Europe and implemented by the Council of Europe in the framework of the Partnership for Good Governance Programme - phase II (2019-2022)

 Context of the project

In April 2014, the European Union and the Council of Europe agreed that targeted co-operation activities with Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, the Republic of Moldova, Ukraine and Belarus – the EU’s Eastern Partnership countries – would be implemented under the Partnership for Good Governance programme. The phase I of the programme (PGGI) started in 2015 and was completed in 2018; the second phase of the programme (PGGII) was launched in 2019 and will run until 2022.

These co-operation activities aim to strengthen the capacity of the Eastern Partnership countries, which are member States of the Council of Europe, with the exception of Belarus, to implement domestic reforms to bring them closer to European standards in the fields of human rights, democracy and the rule of law.

 What do we aim to achieve ?

Project team

 Leonid ANTOHI, Project Coordinator (Strasbourg) 

 Ruslan GREBENCEA, Senior Project Officer (Chisinau)

 Tatiana TRIBOLO, Project Assistant (Chisinau)

 

 

factsheet

 English | Romanian

 

 

 News

Back Using CEPEJ tools in taking decisions on budgeting and distributing resources among Moldovan courts based on objective data

Using CEPEJ tools in taking decisions on budgeting and distributing resources among Moldovan courts based on objective data

On 25 February 2021 a seminar on the use of tools of the European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ) in taking decisions with regard to distribution of resources in courts has been organised in a videoconference format.

European experts familiarised the participants with methods on applying Key Performance Indicators and statistical data to strengthen court management in relation to result-based budgeting and distribution of resources, as well as related best practices of Slovenia, Netherlands and Finland. Local consultants presented the actual state of play of drafting budgets in Moldovan courts.

The seminar was attended by representatives of the Agency for Court Administration, Superior Council of Magistrates, judges, and other representatives of courts of all levels.

This activity will be followed by in-depth consultations on how to properly fundament the requests for courts’ budgets, based on objectively verifiable data related to caseload and performance, as an essential prerequisite for an efficient justice.

The activity has been organized in the framework of the European Union / Council of Europe Project “Support to further strengthening the efficiency and quality of the judicial system in the Republic of Moldova”, as part of the 2019-2021 “Partnership for Good Governance II” programme (PGGII), co-funded by the European Union and the Council of Europe.

 

Online 25 February 2021
  • Diminuer la taille du texte
  • Augmenter la taille du texte
  • Imprimer la page

 Who benefits from the project ?

General public and court users will benefit from improved protection of their rights through the quicker provision judicial services of higher quality.

The parties in civil and administrative litigation will benefit from more effective, timely and efficient enforcement of court decisions.

Superior Council of Magistrates, Ministry of Justice, National Union of Bailiffs, and the National Institute of Justice will benefit from guidance, capacity building and training of their members and staff.

 Who are the national partners ?

Ministry of Justice, Superior Council of Magistrates, Supreme Court of Justice, National Institute of Justice, National Union of Bailiffs