The Rule of Law is a cornerstone of peace, justice, human rights, and good governance. Countries with strong rule of law tend to enjoy economic growth, social stability, quality education, and public trust.
However, the World Justice Project (WJP) Rule of Law Index 2025 reveals a continuing global decline in the rule of law. According to the report, 68% of countries recorded a drop in their scores this year — the highest decline ever — driven largely by rising authoritarianism and weakened checks on government powers.
Despite this global downturn, Nordic nations continue to lead the world, maintaining their top positions as beacons of justice, transparency, and equality.
Top 10 Countries with the Strongest Rule of Law in 2025
The WJP Rule of Law Index 2025 evaluates 143 countries across eight key factors, including constraints on government powers, corruption, open government, fundamental rights, order and security, regulatory enforcement, civil justice, and criminal justice.
Here are the top-performing countries globally:
| Rank | Country | Overall Score | Key Highlights |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Denmark | 0.90 | Ranked highest globally for low corruption and strong government accountability. |
| 2 | Norway | 0.89 | High transparency and equality before the law; robust civil justice system. |
| 3 | Finland | 0.87 | Exceptional performance in human rights, security, and corruption control. |
| 4 | Sweden | 0.85 | Strong open government and protection of civil liberties. |
| 5 | New Zealand | 0.83 | Consistent leadership in democratic governance and legal fairness. |
| 6 | Germany | 0.83 | Balanced justice system and efficient legal enforcement. |
| 7 | Luxembourg | 0.83 | High order and security, strong judicial integrity. |
| 8 | Ireland | 0.82 | Excellent in open governance and minimal corruption. |
| 9 | Netherlands | 0.82 | Strong legal institutions and civic rights protection. |
| 10 | Estonia | 0.82 | Leading digital governance and fair judicial enforcement. |
Source: WJP Rule of Law Index 2025
Observation: The top ten nations are predominantly European democracies, led by Nordic countries that uphold transparency, equality, and human rights as the pillars of governance.
Bottom 10 Countries with the Weakest Rule of Law in 2025
At the other end of the spectrum, several nations continue to struggle with authoritarian governance, corruption, weak justice systems, and limited civil liberties.
| Rank | Country | Overall Score | Key Concerns |
|---|---|---|---|
| 143 | Venezuela | 0.26 | Severe corruption, weak courts, and political repression. |
| 142 | Afghanistan | 0.31 | Ongoing instability, lack of judicial independence. |
| 141 | Cambodia | 0.31 | Limited press freedom and political control over judiciary. |
| 140 | Haiti | 0.32 | Political turmoil and fragile law enforcement. |
| 139 | Nicaragua | 0.33 | Decline in human rights and suppression of opposition. |
| 138 | Myanmar | 0.34 | Military control and absence of democratic governance. |
| 137 | Sudan | 0.34 | Political unrest and systemic government abuse. |
| 136 | Congo (Dem. Rep.) | 0.34 | Widespread corruption and low public security. |
| 135 | Egypt | 0.35 | Restrictions on free speech and judicial independence. |
| 134 | Cameroon | 0.36 | Civil conflict and weak enforcement of rights. |
Source: WJP Rule of Law Index 2025
Observation: Many of the lowest-ranked countries are grappling with conflict, authoritarianism, or state corruption, leading to fragile governance and weak legal protections.
India’s Rule of Law Ranking in 2025
According to the WJP Rule of Law Index 2025,
- India ranks 86th out of 143 countries with an overall score of 0.49, marking a fall of six positions from the previous year.
- India’s performance declined by 1.7%, primarily due to concerns over judicial delays, government accountability, and civil liberties.
Other Key Countries:
- United States: Rank 27, score 0.68 (fell 1 rank, -2.8% drop)
- China: Rank 92, score 0.48 (up 4 ranks, +0.8% improvement)
- Pakistan: Rank 130, score 0.37 (no change, -2.3% drop)
Insight: While India remains mid-ranked globally, its declining trend signals a need for stronger judicial reforms, freedom of expression, and effective governance transparency.
About the WJP Rule of Law Index
The World Justice Project (WJP), a U.S.-based independent organization, annually publishes this index to assess how well countries uphold the rule of law in practice.
It is based on surveys of over 150,000 households and 3,000 legal professionals across eight key dimensions:
- Constraints on government powers
- Absence of corruption
- Open government
- Fundamental rights
- Order and security
- Regulatory enforcement
- Civil justice
- Criminal justice
A score of 1 represents strong adherence to the rule of law, while 0 indicates weak adherence.
Global Trends in 2025
- 68% of countries declined in their rule of law score — the steepest drop in five years.
- Authoritarian trends and erosion of checks and balances are key contributors.
- Nordic countries remain the most law-abiding, while Venezuela, Afghanistan, and Cambodia rank lowest.
- The decline in justice accessibility and press freedom is evident across most regions.


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