The Tanzania Network of Legal Aid Providers (TANLAP) joined policymakers, legal scholars, and justice sector leaders from around the world at the International Legal Aid Group (ILAG) 2025 Conference on Affording Legal Aid.
The lessons drawn from this platform are timely and critical. They reaffirm that:
Access to justice is a constitutional right, not a privilege. Legal aid should be inclusive, people-centered, and rooted in community-based delivery. Securing funding models that ensure continuity beyond donor cycles and Investment in legal aid systems is essential to uphold the rule of law, especially during electoral processes.
The lessons drawn from this platform are timely and critical. They reaffirm that:
Access to justice is a constitutional right, not a privilege. Legal aid should be inclusive, people-centered, and rooted in community-based delivery. Securing funding models that ensure continuity beyond donor cycles and Investment in legal aid systems is essential to uphold the rule of law, especially during electoral processes.
TANLAP remains committed to working with government institutions, development partners, and civil society to strengthen legal aid systems that serve all, particularly women, youth, and persons with disabilities.