The Growing Shadow of Autocracy | Freedom House
webCredibility Rating
High quality. Established institution or organization with editorial oversight and accountability.
Rating inherited from publication venue: Freedom House
This Freedom House annual report documents global democratic backsliding over 20 years, relevant to AI safety governance as it highlights the erosion of institutional checks, free expression, and rule of law that underpin responsible AI oversight and international coordination on emerging technology risks.
Metadata
Summary
Freedom House's 2026 annual report finds global freedom declined for the 20th consecutive year in 2025, with 54 countries deteriorating and only 35 improving. The report highlights the US, Bulgaria, and Italy as top decliners among Free nations, and warns that democratic governments are retreating from their traditional role as defenders of freedom, emboldening autocratic regimes worldwide.
Key Points
- •Global freedom declined for the 20th consecutive year in 2025; 54 countries deteriorated vs. 35 improved.
- •The United States lost 3 points, bringing its total decline since 2005 to 12 points—more than any other Free-rated country except Nauru and Bulgaria.
- •Media freedom, freedom of personal expression, and due process have suffered the heaviest impacts over the two-decade period.
- •19 Partly Free countries dropped to Not Free since 2005, expanding the ranks of increasingly repressive and aggressive autocracies.
- •Democracies are retreating from foreign democracy aid and international engagement, risking a future dominated by emboldened autocrats.
1 FactBase fact citing this source
Cached Content Preview
The Growing Shadow of Autocracy | Freedom House
Skip to main content
Accessibility
Freedom in the World 2026
Map
Policy Recommendations
Regional Trends
Acknowledgements
Methodology
Download PDF
" class="more-button-image">
Freedom in the World
2026
The Growing Shadow of Autocracy
Download PDF
Caption
Russian President Vladimir Putin and other foreign leaders, including Chinese President Xi Jinping and Tajikistani President Emomali Rahmon, attend a military parade marking the end of World War II in Moscow on May 9, 2025. (Photo by Angelos Tzortzinis / AFP)
Global freedom declined for the 20th consecutive year in 2025. But even in this especially challenging moment, there are reasons for optimism.
Key Findings
Global freedom declined for the 20th consecutive year in 2025. A total of 54 countries experienced deterioration in their political rights and civil liberties during the year, while only 35 countries registered improvements. Guinea-Bissau, Tanzania, Burkina Faso, Madagascar, and El Salvador had the largest one-year score declines, while Syria, Sri Lanka, Bolivia, and Gabon recorded the largest gains. Three countries—Bolivia, Fiji, and Malawi—improved from Partly Free to Free status thanks to competitive elections, growing judicial independence, and the strengthening of the rule of law.
Among countries rated Free, the United States, Bulgaria, and Italy have experienced the year’s largest declines. In the United States, an escalation in both legislative dysfunction and executive dominance, growing pressure on people’s ability to engage in free expression, and the new administration’s moves to undermine anticorruption safeguards all contributed to the negative score change. The United States lost 3 points on the report’s 100-point scale, bringing its net decline since 2005 to 12 points, more than any other country rated Free during the same period except for Nauru and Bulgaria.
Although many rights and liberties have been diminished over the last two decades, media freedom, freedom of personal expression, and due process have suffered the heaviest impacts. Coups, armed conflicts, attacks on democratic institutions by elected leaders, and intensified repression by authoritarian regimes have been the main drivers of deterioration during this 20-year period.
Since 2005, the group of countries with Partly Free status has shrunk substantially. Nineteen Partly Free countries have dropped to Not Free, swelling the ranks of the world’s autocracies, which have become more repressive at home and more aggressive abroad. Democratic governments have long worked together to co
... (truncated, 66 KB total)kb-86581aa63b3c9e3b | Stable ID: sid_JstleeoP9n