Justice reform initiative, United Nations and World Bank
International Development
Pivot was engaged by the United Nations and World Bank to support a justice reform initiative examining the effectiveness of court administration and case management arrangements within a national justice system. The engagement examined operational performance, governance structures, case processing workflows, and opportunities for digital enablement across a system operating under significant capacity and resource constraints.
Working alongside judicial leaders, government officials, and international development partners, Pivot identified practical reforms to improve efficiency, transparency, and access to justice. The work required translating internationally recognised reform principles into recommendations that were realistic within the political, institutional, and resource constraints of the operating environment.
Independent integrity and effectiveness review
International Development
Pivot was engaged by the United Nations to independently assess the integrity and effectiveness of development programs operating across multiple countries. The review drew on analysis of financial and operational data, on-the-ground observation, and extensive stakeholder consultation across program staff, implementing partners, and beneficiary communities.
The work examined program outcomes, governance and accountability arrangements, and vulnerabilities in design and oversight where institutional controls are limited and the consequences of failure fall on vulnerable populations. Findings were provided directly to senior institutional leadership and informed significant changes to program design and oversight arrangements.
This engagement required analytical rigour to interrogate complex financial and operational data, the judgment to navigate sensitive institutional dynamics, and the independence to deliver evidence-based conclusions.
Operational design of child protection case management systems
International Development
Pivot was engaged by UNICEF to provide advisory services on the design of modular child protection and child placement case management processes for deployment across humanitarian settings in multiple countries, spanning conflict-affected and post-disaster environments.
The work addressed a critical operational challenge: how to build case management frameworks that allow for necessary local adaptation without creating the kind of variability that leads to inconsistent decision-making and unequal outcomes for highly vulnerable children.
Pivot developed structured process and governance models designed to support rapid deployment, local adaptation, and consistent decision-making across diverse and resource-constrained operating contexts. The engagement required translating child protection principles and operational realities into practical frameworks that could function reliably in environments where institutional infrastructure is limited, staff turnover is high, and the consequences of poor case management fall directly on children at risk.
This work drew directly on Pivot’s experience in court and tribunal case management, justice system process design, and case management system implementation across complex institutional environments.