Scott Worden

Senior Rule of Law Adviser, Rule of Law Center of Innovation

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Contact

Phone: 202-429-3811

E-mail: sworden@usip.org

Scott Worden joined USIP as an adviser in the Rule of Law Center of Innovation in 2007. Previously, he served as an adviser to the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan on human rights and elections issues, as well as to the Afghanistan Joint Election Management Body on the conduct of the 2005 Parliamentary elections.

Before serving in Afghanistan, Worden worked with several Cambodian NGOs on legal reform projects, including advocating procedures for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia to try former Khmer Rouge leaders. He also advised the Cambodian government on drafting its anti-corruption law.

An attorney, Worden practiced law for three years with Coudert Brothers in New York, focusing on international litigation. He has received fellowships from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Luce Scholars Program to work in Cambodia.

Worden has published several pieces on the transitional justice process in Cambodia and Afghanistan. He has a B.A. from Colgate University and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

Publications:

Available on usip.org

Resources & Tools

Credit: File Photo
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.

March 2009 | Congressional Testimony by Scott Worden

Rule of Law Specialist Scott Worden testified on Capitol Hill on March 26, 2009 on the issue of "Human Rights in Afghanistan." A former adviser to the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan on human rights and elections issues, Worden helped the U.S. Helsinki Commission examine the current state of human rights in Afghanistan.

Countries: Afghanistan | Issue Areas: Human Rights
Cover of the Future of Afghanistan
January 2009 | Book by J. Alexander Thier, editor
US policy toward Afghanistan will require a fundamental change in order to achieve long-term stability in the country, according to The Future of Afghanistan, a new U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) collection of essays written by some of the world's top South Asia analysts.  "A focused, coherent, and long-term approach to Afghan and regional stability is necessary to get Afghanistan out of its vicious cycle of insecurity, insurgency, impunity, and corruption" says the Institute's J. Alexander Thier, who edited the volume.

 

Credit: USIP/Scott Worden
December 2008 | Peace Briefing by Scott Worden and Rachel Ray Steele

USIP recently co-sponsored a conference in Cambodia to highlight lessons learned about war crimes documentation for Afghan human rights practitioners. USIP's Scott Worden, who organized the event, reports that a broad range of documentation techniques from computer databases to memorials are available to tell victims' stories in a way that promotes healing and a greater understanding of the past.

Countries: Cambodia | Issue Areas: Rule of Law
February 2008 | Peace Briefing by Scott Worden

Uganda has just agreed to a peace agreement between the government and the rebel Lord’s Resistance Army after more than two decades of brutal conflict. Yet complex issues of transitional justice remain and must be resolved to facilitate national reconciliation.

Countries: Uganda | Issue Areas: Rule of Law
December 2007 | On the Issues by Scott Worden

Scott Worden, a specialist on both transitional justice and Cambodia, discusses the legacy of the Khmer Rouge and Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC).

Countries: Cambodia
September 2007 | Peace Briefing by Karon Cochran-Budhathoki and Scott Worden

Amid the run-up to the Constituent Assembly elections scheduled for November, Nepal's government has prepared a Truth and Reconciliation Commission Act. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) is the most prominent of several commitments made during the peace process to promote transitional justice following Nepal's more than 10-year civil war.

Countries: Nepal | Issue Areas: Rule of Law
August 2007 | Peace Briefing by Scott Worden and Emily Wann

Against a backdrop of halting progress by many international courts, the Special Court of Sierra Leone (SCSL) has quietly had significant success in accomplishing its mission to provide justice for the perpetrators most responsible for the horrific crimes committed against the people of Sierra Leone.

Countries: Sierra Leone | Issue Areas: Rule of Law
July 2007 | Peace Briefing by Christina Caan and Scott Worden

Nearly six years after the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan, efforts to develop civil society are showing tentative signs of progress. The effectiveness of civil society in influencing development in the provinces remains low, and rising insecurity in many regions threatens the future prospects of the nascent Afghan civil society.

Countries: Afghanistan