Freedom in the World assigns a freedom score and status to 210 countries and territories. Click on the countries to learn more.
After stealing Belarus’s 2020 presidential election, Alyaksandr Lukashenka forced many independent media organizations into exile. Among them was Nasha Niva, Belarus’s oldest newspaper and a protector ...
To access the internet, users in unfree countries rely on circumvention tools that are increasingly targeted by repressive ...
Freedom House is founded on the core conviction that freedom flourishes in democratic nations where governments are accountable to their people. Around the world, voters have been forced to make major ...
In today’s world, autocrats appear to offer simple solutions to governance problems. The EU should avoid the temptation to ...
Media freedom has been deteriorating around the world over the past decade. In some of the most influential democracies in the world, populist leaders have overseen concerted attempts to throttle the ...
The following countries—and one territory—featured important developments in 2020 that affected their democratic trajectory, and deserve special scrutiny in 2021. The road to an open democratic ...
The pandemic is fueling digital repression worldwide. The coronavirus pandemic is accelerating a dramatic decline in global internet freedom. For the 10th consecutive year, users have experienced an ...
Protecting and Promoting Internet Freedom For Policymakers Protect privacy and security Strictly regulate the use of surveillance tools and personal-data collection by government and law enforcement ...
Global freedom statuses are calculated on a weighted scale. See the methodology. * Indicates a territory as opposed to an independent country. The West Bank’s political rights rating declined from 6 ...
Democracy and pluralism are under assault. Democracy and pluralism are under assault. Dictators are toiling to stamp out the last vestiges of domestic dissent and spread their harmful influence to new ...
A growing number of leaders in Central and Eastern Europe have dropped even the pretense of playing by the rules of democracy. As the democratic consensus of the post–Cold War order has given way to ...