CHALLENGE
The Central African forest ecosystem contains remarkable biological diversity that the heads of States of the Central African region would like to preserve. Together they adopted a treaty instituting the Central African Forest Commission (COMIFAC) in February 2005. Illegal logging and lack of appropriate forest governance are major obstacles to the efforts of the concerned countries to alleviate poverty, develop their natural resources, and protect global and local environmental services and values.
In order to coordinate cross-border solutions (by having a monitoring and evaluation system, organizing investments and tax policies, and harmonizing the legal systems of COMIFAC member countries), all countries need to have access to each others' forest and wildlife rules and regulations.
Unfortunately, the legal texts are difficult to access and the institutions responsible for the publication of the laws do not benefit from a modern archiving system, even less a sustainable electronic one.
APPROACH
In response to this need, the World Bank's EU-funded FLEG program (now part of PROFOR) supported the creation of electronic legal databases in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Gabon, using the Global Legal Information Network (GLIN). GLIN is an independent cooperative network that maintains a free and credible online legal database stored in national servers and the central server at the US Library of Congress.
In Gabon, efforts to create a functional GLIN Station meant selecting, organizing and training a team to collect and submit laws, one by one, in the system and at the same time create a local electronic archiving system containing all the official gazettes available in a challenging environment. (Most of the archives are stockpiled in a room at the mercy of rats and dampness.) Each law requires an abstract in English and French according to GLIN norms and keywords for easy research.
RESULTS
