Academic Freedom Unevenly Distributed

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61 Countries with High Degree of Academic Freedom, 3.6 Billion People Without Any

Academic freedom today is not available for 3.6 billion people, or 45.5 percent of the world’s population. After a global peak in academic freedom in 2006, the situation today is comparable to circumstances fifty years ago in 1973. This is one of the results of the 2024 Update of the Academic Freedom Index (AFI), which researchers at the FAU have presented. The new AFI data provides an overview of the state of academic freedom in 179 countries. However, there is reason for optimism: over the same period, academic freedom has improved in 56 countries and reached high levels in 61 countries with a total of 1.1 billion inhabitants. The researchers identified ten countries in which academic freedom actually increased steadily in 2023 – a positive development that was last observed more than 20 years ago.

Academic Freedom and Polarization

Academic freedom faces risk in countries with pronounced societal polarization. This year’s AFI Update identifies the top six countries and territories that experienced an ongoing decline episode in academic freedom in 2023. In each case, namely, El Salvador, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Russia, and Venezuela, the downturn in the Academic Freedom Index was preceded by a rise in polarization.

On the other hand, academic freedom expanded in Brazil, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Thailand despite polarization. That is, the relationship between academic freedom and polarization is far from straight-forward. The legal framework but also universities’ and academics’ own agency likely play a role in mitigating polarization pressures on free science and higher education.

Academic Freedom and Population Data

Share of Population by Status Groups in 1973, 2006, and 2023. For this figure, we divided the AFI into five quintiles (status groups A to E). We did not consider the uncertainty intervals when assigning the countries into the status groups. Population data for the countries/territories comes from World Bank’s World Development Indicators and have been rounded for presentation purposes.

International Data Collection

The AFI is the result of a cooperation between the V-Dem Institute at the University of Gothenburg and political scientists at FAU. It is composed of five indicators, namely the freedom to research and teach; the freedom of academic exchange and dissemination; the freedom of academic and cultural expression; the institutional autonomy of universities, and campus integrity.

The AFI provides data on academic freedom worldwide for the period from 1900 to 2023. The index rests on assessments by 2,329 country experts from around the world, one million observations at coder level and a customized, peer-reviewed statistical model that systematically aggregates expert assessments into a single score. The German Volkswagen Foundation funds the project for a total of five years.

Open Access and Interactive Visualization of World Map

The detailed data that make up the AFI 1900–2023 are available open access to facilitate further studies. You can find interactive visualization of the data, country profiles, and information on the index project at: https://academic-freedom-index.net Easy-to-use graphing tools are also available for anyone interested; they can be consulted by researchers, students, university administrators, research funders, and policy-makers.

Further Information

Prof. Dr. Katrin Kinzelbach

Dr. Lars Lott

Institute of Political Science

Phone: +49 1522 839 04 00

katrin.kinzelbach@fau.de

lars.lott@fau.de