Scott N. Carlson
Senior Rule of Law Adviser, Rule of Law Center of Innovation

Contact
Scott N. Carlson is an adviser in the Institute’s Rule of Law Center of Innovation, where he focuses on rule of law initiatives in post-conflict environments. He serves as co-director and facilitator for the International Network to Promote the Rule of Law and is the lead drafter of a USIP-U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime Rule of Law Handbook. Prior to joining the Institute, he worked both in the field and at headquarters postings as an international rule of law adviser designing and administering technical assistance programs for a variety of organizations, including the UN, EU, USAID, GTZ, World Bank, OSCE and the private sector.
During his most extensive overseas posting, Carlson co-directed a project to organize a participatory constitution-making process in Albania. This project, a joint initiative of GTZ, OSCE, and USAID, allowed a diverse range of public involvement in the development of Albania’s first permanent postcommunist constitution. On the basis of this experience, Carlson joined USIP to promote participatory constitutional processes in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Iraq.
Previously, Carlson was a Supreme Court Fellow at the U.S. Supreme Court, and he was a lawyer for the U.S. Department of Treasury, receiving various performance awards. Carlson received a B.A. from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, a J.D., cum laude, from the University of Georgia School of Law and an LL.M., with distinction, from Georgetown University Law School.
Publications:
- "Albania," in Nations in Transit, edited by Freedom House, (Freedom House, 2000-2002).
- A Primer for Legal and Judicial Rule of Law Work in Complex Multi-dimensional Peacekeeping Operations (UN DPKO 2007).
- "A Targeted Analysis of the Implementation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in the Republic of Macedonia," ABA/CEELI ICCPR Legal Implementation Index (Spring 2005).
- "Legal and Judicial Rule of Law Work in Multi-dimensional Peacekeeping Operations: Lessons-Learned Study," UNDPKO Lessons-Learned Series (Spring 2006).
- "Politics, Public Participation, and the 1998 Albanian Constitution," Osteuroparecht (Winter 1999).
- "Political Killings in Kosovo/Kosova," co-author, American Bar Association Report (ABA, Fall 2000).
- "The Post-Conflict Transitional Administration of Kosovo and the Lessons-Learned in Efforts to Establish a Judiciary and Rule of Law," co-author, Michigan Journal of International Law (Fall 2001).
- The Practical Guide to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, co-author, (Transnational, Fall 2003).
Resources & Tools
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March 2009
USIP has supported over 300 products, projects, and activities related to human rights and peacebuilding. From grants to fellowships, from training to education, from working groups to publications, the Institute strives to encourage more practice and scholarly work on the issue of human rights, and seeks to deepen understanding of the role human rights play in conflict and in peace. Issue Areas: Human Rights, Peacebuilding
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January 2009
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Peace Brief
by Scott Carlson and Michael Dziedzic
For more than a decade, experienced international practitioners and peace scholars have recognized that multilateral interventions in societies ravaged by internal conflict cannot succeed unless they come prepared to deal with the inevitable void in public security and inability of the legal system to function effectively. In 1998, two core components of any solution to this crucial deficiency were highlighted in Policing the New World Disorder. |
Events
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July 17, 2009
The second annual meeting of the International Network to Promote the Rule of Law (INPROL) took place on Friday, July 17 at the United States Institute of Peace. The focus this year was on a discussion of preliminary lessons learned from the experience of the UN Mission in Kosovo in establishing the justice and corrections systems in Kosovo. Countries: Kosovo
| Issue Areas: International and Regional Organizations, Peacekeeping, Post-Conflict Activities, Rule of Law
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January 22, 2009
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May 20, 2008
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