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Home > Programs and Initiatives > International Cooperation Group
- What is the International Legal Programs Section?
The International Legal Programs Section (ILPS) is part of the Department
of Justice Canada’s Policy Sector. It has two broad areas
of responsibility.
- It administers and manages all programs and activities related
to the delivery of Canadian international technical legal assistance
and institutional capacity-building to countries in many regions
of the world as they build, reform and strengthen their legal
systems and also provides responses to urgent justice sector
crisis situations as part of a whole-of-government intervention. As
such, the ILPS is the Department’s centre of expertise
on issues concerning the building of legal systems in other states
and the provision of urgent justice sector responses in crisis
situations.
- It supports the Department’s and the Minister of Justice’s
international activities, such as visits to Canada by justice
ministers and officials from other countries and Canadian participation
in international conferences involving justice ministries.
- Why does the Department of Justice Canada work in these
areas?
The Government of Canada has identified development assistance
in matters of justice and the rule of law as a foreign policy priority
in certain countries and regions of the world. Efforts to
help countries build, reform and strengthen their legal systems will
ultimately benefit Canadians because sound justice systems and institutions,
based on the rule of law and respect for the law, help to foster
peace, prosperity and stability.
The Department of Justice Canada created the ILPS to meet the need
for an organization that could represent Canada’s interests
and deliver technical assistance to the justice sector within a government-to-government
context. As Canada’s largest legal organization, the
Department has many people who have the legal expertise, experience
and understanding of the legal systems in Canada and in other countries
to help address issues that are often extremely challenging. The
ILPS ensures that these strengths are tapped in an effective and
coordinated fashion.
- How long has the Department of Justice Canada been working
in the field of international legal assistance to other countries?
The Department has been involved in this work since 1990,
but the ILPS was created in 2005 to coordinate and deliver these
initiatives. This was the Department’s contribution to a whole-of-government
approach to the advancement of Canada’s foreign policy and
development assistance agenda.
- Where does ILPS work?
ILPS involvement depends essentially on the nature of the
expertise required and on the conditions of the proposed initiative.
The ILPS works with partners at the Canadian International Development
Agency (CIDA) and the Department of Foreign Affairs and International
Trade (DFAIT) and with their counterparts in government and civil
society in other countries to identify where Department of Justice
Canada expertise can be most helpful and productive.
- Does ILPS deal with extradition issues?
No. These are the responsibility of the International Assistance
Group in the Department’s Litigation Branch.
- Does ILPS deal with immigration and refugee issues?
No. These are the responsibility of Citizenship and Immigration
Canada and the Immigration and Refugee Board.
- Does ILPS deal with international law issues?
No. The International Law Section in the Department of Justice’s
Public Law Sector is responsible for providing legal opinions on
international issues relating to Canada. DFAIT has a legal
department staffed by Justice lawyers who specialize in foreign affairs
and trade law issues.
- Does ILPS provide funding for legal reform projects?
No. The ILPS implements projects that are funded by partners
such as CIDA and DFAIT.