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Australia-Philippine Judicial Cooperation:
Judicial Study Tour October 2001

(From left to right) Judge Bruselas, Judge Daway, Father Aquino, Judge Garcia, Judge Tipon, Justice Vitug, Chief Justice Black, Justice Ryan, Justice Marshall and Justice Goldberg welcoming the delegation.
The official Welcome Lunch hosted by Chief Justice Black
The official Welcome Lunch - Registrar Wood in centre

View in .pdf or .rtf format
View report by the delegation in .pdf or .rtf format

CDI Home page The Australian National University
Crawford School of Economics and Government
The Centre for Democratic Institutions (CDI) is a government-funded body that supports the efforts of new democracies in the Asia-Pacific region to strengthen their political systems. It provides training, technical assistance and peer support for parliamentarians and emerging leaders in Southeast Asia and the South Pacific, with a particular focus on Indonesia, Timor-Leste, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and Fiji.

The Australian Government established CDI in 1998. It is funded primarily by the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID). One of the primary ways in which CDI works to promote democracy is through strengthening parliamentary governance and political parties. The Centre focusses on parliamentary and political party development, and conducts flagship training courses and policy-relevant research on these subjects.
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