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Founder | Homer E. Moyer, Jr. |
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Location | |
Chair of the board | Mark Ellis |
Executive director | Robert Strang |
Website | http://ceeliinstitute.org |
The CEELI Institute is an independent, non-profit, non-governmental organization, striving to advance the rule of law. It was founded in 1999 and is located at the Villa Grébovka (Gröbova vila), Prague, Czech Republic, where its renovated residential training facility was formally dedicated by former Czech President Vaclav Havel in 2003.[1][2] It became fully independent of the American Bar Association in 2004.[3] In July 2022, Russia designated CEELI Institute as an "undesirable organisation".[4]
The CEELI Institute's mission is to advance the rule of law across various countries in order to protect fundamental rights and individual liberties, promote transparent, incorruptible, accountable governments, create the foundation for economic growth and development, and promote peaceful resolution of disputes.[5] Through innovative training programs, the CEELI Institute educates legal professionals with a focus on providing tools to promote human rights, strengthen democratic institutions, fight corruption, and support free market economies.[6] Its historic focus was on Central and Eastern Europe, but it has since expanded its work to include Asia and Africa.[7]
CEELI also works with judges and reformers in countries in transition to support fair, transparent, and effective judicial systems, strengthen democratic institutions, build respect for individual rights, and promote the continuing development of market economies.[8][9] CEELI holds training programs, workshops, webinars, roundtables, and conferences designed to target the needs of the participants. CEELI conducted approximately eighty-six programs in 2023 in Prague, in-country, or online.[10] Roughly sixty percent of CEELI’S programs focused on Central and Eastern Europe, while the remaining programs were split between South Asia and Anglophone Africa.[10] CEELI program instructors are international professionals committed to advancing the rule of law.[11] The Institute has worked with more than 2000 lawyers from 35 countries in 2023.[10]
The Conference of Chief Justices in Central and Eastern Europe was launched in Prague at the Institute in 2011,[12] and meets annually hosted by different national judiciaries.[13] In October 2015, the Conference met in Croatia and signed the Statement of Principles of the Independence of the Judiciary, also known as the Brijuni Statement, an important reaffirmation of the fundamental principles of judicial independence and integrity.[14] In 2024, the Conference convened in Kosovo.[15]
In 2012, CEELI Institute created the Central and Eastern European Judicial Exchange Network for practicing judges committed to the rule of law.[16] Today, the network has grown to over 400 judges from 19 countries in Central and Eastern Europe.[17] In 2017, CEELI launched a program with the U.S. Federal Judicial Center for judges in South Asia, focusing on developing local trainers at the judicial training academies of India, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives.[18][19] In 2021, CEELI launched the African Judicial Exchange Network, which now consists of 200 judges from eleven Anglophone countries.[20] The CEELI networks focus on promoting judicial independence and integrity. The Institute organizes regular events for the networks to ensure the growth of a supportive peer exchange system. The judges in the CEELI networks compiled over 130 judiciary-related international standards in their "Manual Independence, Impartiality, and Integrity of Justice: A Thematic Compilation of International Standards, Policies, and Best Practices".[21] Currently, CEELI has culminated 20 publications on their website of approximately six languages.[22][23]
In June 2024, Polish Justice Minister Adam Bodnar provided the keynote address at CEELI’s Annual Meeting focusing on how Poland succeeded in reversing its decade of rule of law backsliding and is now restoring judicial independence.[24] In November 2024, the CEELI Institute, together with the International Bar Association and the Center for International Law & Policy in Africa, developed the Prague Statement on Universal Criminal Jurisdiction based on input from an October program held at CEELI on atrocity crimes.[25]