Islam and democracy
Islam and democracy refers to the ongoing scholarly and political debate concerning the compatibility of Islamic doctrine—centered on divine sovereignty (hakimiyya) via Sharia law—with democratic governance predicated on popular sovereignty, electoral pluralism, separation of powers, and protection of minority rights independent of religious edicts.[1] While proponents invoke Quranic concepts like shura (consultation) to assert potential alignment, empirical analyses consistently show Muslim-majority countries averaging lower democracy scores than non-Muslim counterparts, with most classified as authoritarian or hybrid regimes as of 2024.[2][3] Global surveys reveal majorities of Muslims in regions from South Asia to sub-Saharan Africa favoring Sharia as the official law of the land, often extending to non-Muslims and including hudud punishments, which poses tensions with liberal democratic norms like equality under secular law.[4] This discord manifests in practice through Islamist movements that, upon electoral victories, frequently prioritize theocratic elements over institutional checks, as seen in cases like post-Arab Spring Egypt and Tunisia's regressions.[5] Notable exceptions, such as Indonesia's multiparty system, coexist with persistent blasphemy laws and religious pluralism constraints, underscoring causal links between orthodox Islamic interpretations and democratic deficits rather than mere socioeconomic factors.[6][7]Islamic Theological Foundations
Quranic and Hadith Perspectives on Governance
The Quran frames governance as an extension of submission to divine will, mandating obedience to Allah, the Prophet Muhammad, and authorities who uphold revealed law, without endorsing elective systems that subordinate Sharia to majority preferences. Surah An-Nisa 4:59 instructs: "O you who have believed, obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority among you. And if you disagree over anything, refer it to Allah and the Messenger, if you should believe in Allah and the Last Day. That is better and more enduring." This establishes a chain of authority rooted in revelation, where rulers' legitimacy depends on enforcing Allah's commands, as deviation invites referral back to scriptural sources rather than communal vote. Similarly, Surah Al-Ma'idah 5:44 warns that "whoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed—then it is those who are the disbelievers," positioning governance as adjudication by divine statutes, incompatible with legislative sovereignty vested in human assemblies. Consultation, or shura, appears as a virtue of the faithful but not as a mechanism for lawmaking independent of Quran and Sunnah. Surah Ash-Shura 42:38 praises communities "whose affair is [determined by] consultation among themselves," while Surah Al-Imran 3:159 advises the Prophet to "consult them in the matter," reflecting deliberative input among believers or elites. Classical exegeses, such as Tafsir Ibn Kathir, interpret shura as obligatory for state affairs like leader selection but confined within Islamic orthodoxy, excluding consensus on innovations (bid'ah) or rulings contradicting revelation. The absence of verses prescribing universal suffrage, separation of religion and state, or equality of non-Muslims in rule underscores a theocentric model over participatory democracy. Hadith collections reinforce prophetic leadership as exemplary, with succession modeled on communal pledge (bay'ah) rather than hereditary or electoral mandates. Sahih al-Bukhari narrates the companions' consultation to select Abu Bakr as caliph following the Prophet's death in 632 CE, involving deliberation among key figures like Umar ibn al-Khattab, without broader enfranchisement.[8] Obedience to rulers is qualified by fidelity to divine orders; Sahih Muslim records the Prophet stating, "Whoso obeys me obeys God; and whoso disobeys me disobeys God," extending to appointed leaders who "uphold the Book of God."[9] Narrations urging patience with flawed rulers, such as "Whoever dislikes something from the ruler should be patient, for whoever dies without having pledged allegiance dies the death of jahiliyyah (pre-Islamic ignorance)," prioritize stability under Sharia-compliant authority over dissent or regime change via ballot. These texts collectively prioritize hakimiyyah (divine sovereignty) and qualified consultation, viewing unchecked popular rule as a form of shirk (associating partners with Allah) if it overrides revelation.Shura (Consultation) and Its Scope in Islamic Jurisprudence
Shura, derived from the Arabic root sh-w-r meaning to consult or deliberate, refers to the Islamic principle of mutual consultation in decision-making processes, particularly for communal affairs. It is explicitly endorsed in the Quran, such as in Surah Ash-Shura (42:38), which describes successful believers as those "whose affair is [determined by] consultation among themselves," and in Surah Al Imran (3:159), where the Prophet Muhammad is instructed to consult his followers even after divine guidance on matters like warfare.[10] These verses establish Shura as a normative practice for governance and social organization, emphasizing collective wisdom while subordinating it to divine revelation.[11] The Prophet Muhammad exemplified Shura through consultations with companions on strategic decisions, such as the Battle of Uhud in 625 CE, where he sought advice despite possessing prophetic knowledge, thereby modeling humility and inclusivity in leadership.[12] In early Islamic practice, this extended to the selection of Abu Bakr as the first caliph in 632 CE via consultation among senior companions at Saqifah Bani Sa'idah, highlighting Shura's role in leadership transitions absent direct prophetic designation.[10] Classical jurists across the four Sunni schools—Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi'i, and Hanbali—integrated Shura into fiqh as a recommended or obligatory mechanism for rulers to gauge expert opinions, applying it universally in interpretive rulings (ijtihad) while recognizing its roots in prophetic sunnah.[11] In Islamic jurisprudence, Shura's scope is delimited to public matters (umur al-umma) not explicitly prescribed by Quran or Sunnah, such as administrative policies, military tactics, or ijma' (consensus)-forming processes, but excludes core worship (ibadat) or unambiguous divine commands (nass).[13] It functions as advisory rather than veto-binding, with the ruler or imam retaining final authority to align outcomes with Sharia, as majority views in consultation do not override explicit texts; for instance, Hanbali scholars like Ibn Taymiyyah (d. 1328 CE) argued that Shura binds only insofar as it approximates truth, not as popular will.[11] Scholarly opinions on its obligatoriness vary: some, like those in the Shafi'i tradition, deem it fard kifayah (collective duty) for qualified scholars (ahl al-hall wa al-aqd), while others view it as mustahabb (recommended) for non-essential consultations, but all agree rulers neglect it at peril of legitimacy, as per hadiths stressing prophetic adherence to counsel.[14] [15] This consultative framework contrasts with modern democracy by restricting participants to pious, knowledgeable elites rather than universal electorate, and by prohibiting legislation that contravenes Sharia, as articulated in classical texts like Al-Mawardi's Al-Ahkam al-Sultaniyyah (d. 1058 CE), which limits Shura to executive implementation within divine bounds.[10] Reformist interpretations expanding Shura to electoral parliaments often overlook these fiqh constraints, prioritizing traditional delineations to preserve sovereignty (hakimiyyah) as God's alone.[16]Hakimiyyah (Divine Sovereignty) Versus Popular Sovereignty
Hakimiyyah, or divine sovereignty, asserts that ultimate authority and legislative power in Islam reside exclusively with Allah, rendering human legislation invalid if it deviates from Sharia derived from the Quran and Sunnah.[17] This concept, formalized in the 20th century, posits that any system granting sovereignty to entities other than God constitutes shirk (polytheism) and jahiliyyah (pre-Islamic ignorance).[18] Proponents draw from Quranic verses such as 12:40, which states, "Legislation is not but for Allah," to argue that governance must enforce divine law without compromise.[19] The doctrine was first systematically articulated by Abul A'la Maududi in the 1940s, who described hakimiyyah as God's absolute rule over creation, incompatible with secular or man-made systems.[20] Sayyid Qutb expanded this in his 1964 manifesto Milestones, declaring that true Islamic society rejects all non-divine authority, viewing modern states—even Muslim-majority ones—as apostate for adopting Western legal frameworks.[18] Qutb emphasized that hakimiyyah demands a vanguard to overthrow such regimes and establish rule by divine fiat, influencing groups like the Muslim Brotherhood and later jihadist movements.[19] In contrast, popular sovereignty underpins democracy by vesting ultimate law-making power in the people or their elected representatives, often through constitutions that prioritize majority will or human rights over fixed religious texts.[21] Adherents of hakimiyyah reject this as idolatrous, arguing it elevates human judgment above God's, as seen in Qutb's critique of parliaments that legislate independently of Sharia.[17] For instance, democratic amendments allowing interest-based banking or gender equality laws conflicting with traditional Islamic rulings exemplify this usurpation, rendering such systems illegitimate in Islamist theology.[18][19] This tension manifests in Islamist opposition to unbridled democracy, with thinkers like Qutb viewing it as a tool of Western imperialism that dilutes divine rule.[21] While some propose "Islamic democracy" subordinating popular vote to Sharia veto—e.g., Iran's Guardian Council model—the core hakimiyyah framework deems pure popular sovereignty incompatible, prioritizing enforcement of God's laws over electoral consent.[20] Historical caliphates, in this view, approximated hakimiyyah through juristic interpretation, but modern democracies fail by codifying human autonomy.[19]Historical Models of Islamic Rule
Early Caliphates (Rashidun and Umayyad)
The Rashidun Caliphate (632–661 CE) featured leadership transitions rooted in consultation (shura) among the Prophet Muhammad's senior companions, emphasizing merit, piety, and consensus over hereditary claims. Upon the Prophet's death on June 8, 632 CE, Abu Bakr was selected as the first caliph through an impromptu assembly at Saqifah Bani Sa'idah in Medina, where emigrants (Muhajirun) and Medinan helpers (Ansar) debated succession and pledged bay'ah (allegiance) to him, prioritizing unity amid tribal rivalries and apostasy threats. This process, while deliberative, involved a narrow elite circle rather than communal voting, with the caliph's authority deriving from his role as successor (khalifah) to the Prophet in enforcing Sharia and commanding the ummah.[22] Umar ibn al-Khattab succeeded Abu Bakr in 634 CE via nomination on the latter's deathbed, ratified by widespread bay'ah, introducing a hybrid of appointment and affirmation that underscored caliphal discretion tempered by communal endorsement.[23] Umar's assassination in November 644 CE prompted him to empanel a shura council of six prominent companions to choose among themselves, excluding Ali initially; the group selected Uthman ibn Affan after three days of deliberation, with Uthman confirmed by bay'ah despite some dissent. Ali ibn Abi Talib assumed the caliphate in June 656 CE following Uthman's murder amid accusations of nepotism, gaining bay'ah from Medinan supporters but facing opposition that ignited the First Fitna (civil war). These selections highlighted shura's role as advisory deliberation among Quraysh elites and early converts, not institutionalized elections; participation hinged on religious stature and tribal standing, excluding non-Muslims, women, and lower strata, while ultimate legitimacy rested on upholding divine law over human legislation.[24] Historical scholarship views this as consultative oligarchy, incompatible with democratic equality or popular sovereignty, as the caliph wielded near-absolute executive, judicial, and military powers subject only to Sharia constraints and potential rebellion for tyranny.[25] The Umayyad Caliphate (661–750 CE) transitioned to hereditary monarchy under Muawiya I, who consolidated power after defeating Ali's forces at Siffin in 657 CE and securing caliphal title in 661 CE via arbitration and bay'ah from key provinces. Breaking from Rashidun precedent, Muawiya designated his son Yazid as heir in 676 CE, formalizing wilayat al-'ahd (succession covenant) and confining leadership to the Sufyanid branch of the Umayyad clan, with subsequent caliphs like Abd al-Malik (r. 685–705 CE) perpetuating dynastic inheritance amid revolts. Governance centralized fiscal and military administration in Damascus, appointing governors loyal to the ruling family and relying on bay'ah as ritual affirmation rather than shura-driven selection, though consultative councils persisted informally for policy.[26] This model prioritized stability and expansion—conquering North Africa and Iberia by 711 CE—over elective ideals, fostering perceptions of kingship (mulukiyya) over caliphal stewardship and alienating partisans of shura who decried it as un-Islamic innovation (bid'ah).[27] Analysts note the Umayyads' autocratic evolution reflected pragmatic adaptation to imperial scale, yet it entrenched exclusionary rule antithetical to participatory democracy, as sovereignty remained Allah's via Sharia implementation, not delegated to the governed.[28]Medieval Islamic Empires (Abbasid and Others)
The Abbasid Caliphate, established in 750 CE following the Abbasid Revolution led by Abu al-Abbas as-Saffah, marked a transition to dynastic rule claiming descent from the Prophet Muhammad's uncle Abbas, with initial legitimacy derived from bay'ah pledges by revolutionary supporters and provincial elites rather than widespread consultation or election.[29] Early caliphs like al-Mansur (r. 754–775 CE) centralized authority through a professional bureaucracy and standing army, reducing reliance on the shura mechanisms of tribal consensus seen in the Rashidun era, as administrative needs of a vast empire favored hierarchical control over participatory governance.[30] Bay'ah evolved into a formal oath of allegiance exacted from military commanders, governors, and ulema, serving to affirm rather than select rulers, with no provision for public veto or representation.[31] By the 9th century, under caliphs like Harun al-Rashid (r. 786–809 CE), de facto power shifted to viziers such as the Barmakid family, who managed finances, diplomacy, and provincial administration, while the caliph's role became increasingly ceremonial and religious.[32] This devolution intensified after 861 CE with the rise of Turkish slave soldiers (mamluks), leading to anarchic periods like the "Saffarid" and "Anarchy at Samarra" (861–870 CE), where caliphs were often puppets of military factions. From 945 CE, the Shia Buyid emirs dominated the Sunni Abbasid court, extracting revenue and policy influence until the Sunni Seljuk Turks supplanted them in 1055 CE, when Sultan Tughril Beg entered Baghdad and received caliphal investiture as "King of the East and West."[33] The Seljuks formalized a sultanate-caliphate duality, with sultans wielding executive and military authority—supported by iqta land grants to Turkic nobles—while caliphs issued symbolic bay'ah and fatwas to legitimize rule, reflecting a pragmatic alliance rather than democratic accountability.[34] Parallel medieval Islamic polities, such as the Fatimid Caliphate (909–1171 CE), adhered to Ismaili Shia doctrine where the caliph-imam embodied infallible divine guidance, bypassing shura for esoteric hierarchy and da'wa missionary networks to enforce loyalty, with no elective succession or elite consultation challenging imamic absolutism.[35] In these systems, governance emphasized umma unity under divine law (sharia) over popular sovereignty, with consultation limited to advisory majlis councils comprising court officials and scholars, often manipulated to endorse caliphal or sultanic decisions.[31] Historical analyses attribute the absence of enduring democratic institutions to imperial scale demanding centralized coercion and hereditary legitimacy, independent of theological mandates, as early consultative practices eroded under pressures for stability and expansion.[36] Thus, medieval Islamic empires prioritized patrimonial loyalty and religious sanction, forestalling institutional mechanisms for broad political participation.Ottoman Empire and Pre-Modern Legitimacy Structures
The Ottoman Empire's political legitimacy rested on the sultan's dual role as secular monarch and spiritual leader, embodying divine authority as zill Allah ("shadow of God on earth"), a concept rooted in Islamic tradition that positioned the ruler as God's deputy enforcing justice and order.[37] This framework, formalized after Sultan Selim I's conquest of the Mamluk Sultanate in 1517, which granted control over Mecca and Medina, elevated the Ottoman sovereign to caliph, protector of the faith (Khādim al-Ḥaramayn), thereby deriving legitimacy from guardianship of Islam's holy sites and orthodoxy rather than elective consent or popular sovereignty.[38] Sultans like Mehmed II (r. 1451–1481), who conquered Constantinople in 1453 and adopted Byzantine imperial titles alongside Islamic ones such as Gazi (holy warrior), further bolstered claims through military victories against perceived enemies of Islam, aligning rule with the ghazi tradition of expansionist jihad.[37] Governance integrated shari'a (Islamic law) with kanun (sultanic decrees), where shari'a governed personal status and religious matters, while kanun addressed taxation, land tenure, and criminal penalties—areas underdeveloped in classical shari'a—allowing pragmatic adaptations like permitting interest rates up to 10% under Suleiman the Magnificent (r. 1520–1566).[38] This dual system, codified by Mehmed II and expanded thereafter, subordinated strict shari'a adherence to state imperatives, with the sultan as ultimate lawgiver, whose edicts were legitimized by ulema fatwas affirming alignment with divine will despite occasional contradictions, such as the coercive devşirme conscription of Christian youths for the Janissary corps.[39] [37] The Circle of Justice doctrine underscored this, positing interdependence between ruler, military, subjects, and revenue, with the sultan's duty to maintain nizam (order) through equitable rule, yet vesting ultimate authority in the monarch without mechanisms for accountability beyond potential rebellion or scholarly critique.[37] Pre-modern legitimacy structures emphasized dynastic heredity, religious endorsement by appointed ulema (e.g., the Sheikh ul-Islam issuing binding fatwas), and administrative efficiency via the Imperial Divan—an advisory council of viziers and officials convened by the sultan for policy deliberation, akin to limited shura (consultation) but devoid of representative election or binding power on the ruler.[38] The millet system granted semi-autonomous communal governance to non-Muslim groups (e.g., Orthodox Christians, Jews) under their own leaders, fostering stability through tolerance (istimalet) and tribute extraction, yet reinforcing centralized Islamic supremacy without extending political participation.[38] Unlike democratic systems, sovereignty derived from divine sanction and conquest prowess, not popular mandate; challenges to legitimacy, such as during succession crises or fiscal strains, were met through force or co-optation, not electoral reform, reflecting a patrimonial order where the sultan's personal piety and welfare provisions (e.g., public rituals, endowments) sustained loyalty among elites and masses.[37] This model, enduring from the empire's founding circa 1300 until the 19th-century Tanzimat era, exemplified pre-modern Islamic rule's prioritization of hierarchical stability over participatory governance.[38]Theoretical Debates on Compatibility
Traditionalist and Salafi Rejections of Democracy
Salafi and traditionalist Muslim scholars reject democracy primarily on theological grounds, asserting that it contravenes the Islamic doctrine of tawhid (divine oneness) by elevating human legislation above divine law (sharia). They argue that democratic systems embody hakimiyyah al-insaniyyah (human sovereignty), wherein the people or their representatives arrogate to themselves the right to enact laws, which constitutes shirk (polytheism) by associating partners with God's exclusive authority as legislator.[40][41] This position draws from Quranic injunctions such as Surah Al-Ma'idah 5:44, which states that those who do not judge by what Allah has revealed are disbelievers, interpreting it as prohibiting any governance not strictly derived from revelation.[42] Classical traditionalists, exemplified by the 13th-14th century Hanbali scholar Ibn Taymiyyah, laid foundational critiques by emphasizing that political authority must enforce God's supremacy without dilution by human consensus or popular will. Ibn Taymiyyah contended that true legitimacy stems from adherence to sharia, rejecting any system where the ummah (community) claims ultimate sovereignty, as this undermines divine rule and invites fitna (strife).[43] His views, preserved in works like Al-Siyasa al-Shar'iyya, prioritize the caliphate or imamate as the sole valid model, where rulers act as delegates (wakiil) enforcing God's commands rather than deriving power from electoral mandates. Modern traditionalists extend this by dismissing democratic pluralism as incompatible with Islam's unitary truth, viewing multiparty competition as fostering division antithetical to the ummah's cohesion under a single divine imperative.[44] Salafi thinkers, who seek to emulate the salaf al-salih (pious predecessors), amplify these objections in contemporary contexts, often issuing fatwas against voting or participation. For instance, prominent Salafi authorities like Saudi Grand Mufti Abdul Aziz ibn Baz (d. 1999) and Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymeen (d. 2001) declared democracy a form of kufr (unbelief) because it allows laws conflicting with sharia, such as those permitting riba (usury) or gender mixing, to prevail through majority vote.[41] Salafi literature, such as tracts on the "evils of democracy," enumerates harms including the erosion of religious authority, promotion of secularism, and legitimization of un-Islamic rulers, urging Muslims to abstain from democratic processes to avoid complicity in idolatry.[42] Jihadi Salafis, like those in groups such as Ahrar al-Sham, explicitly denounce democracy as a Western import antithetical to jihad and sharia implementation, while even quietist Salafis prioritize da'wa (proselytization) over political engagement.[45] These rejections persist despite tactical variations; for example, some Salafis in Indonesia have critiqued democracy's secular foundations while conditionally accepting a Muslim ruler's authority if it approximates shura (consultation) without compromising hakimiyyah.[46] However, doctrinal purity demands total repudiation, as partial accommodation risks diluting Islam's absolutist claims to governance. Critics from reformist circles note that such stances overlook historical Islamic flexibility in consultation, but traditionalists and Salafis counter that any deviation from unadulterated sharia invites apostasy.[47]Islamist Conceptions: Theo-Democracy and Guardianship
Islamist thinkers have proposed models that integrate limited democratic mechanisms with the supremacy of divine law, subordinating popular will to hakimiyyah (God's sovereignty). Abul A'la Maududi, founder of Jamaat-e-Islami, articulated the concept of "theo-democracy" in his writings during the mid-20th century, describing it as a "divine democratic government" where human authority derives solely from Allah and operates within the bounds of Sharia.[48] In this framework, legislative and executive powers are delegated to Muslims as vice-regents (khalifah), but only to implement divine commandments; no law contrary to the Quran or Sunnah can be enacted, rendering true popular sovereignty illusory.[49] Maududi emphasized shura (consultation) as a consultative body for rational decision-making on permissible matters, akin to a parliament, but explicitly rejected Western democracy's secular foundations, arguing that equating human legislation with divine rule constitutes shirk (polytheism).[50] This theo-democratic ideal influenced Islamist movements in South Asia and beyond, positing an Islamic state where elections and representation occur but are vetoed by religious oversight to preserve orthodoxy. Maududi's model, outlined in works like his 1941 treatise on the caliphate, envisions three pillars—tawhid (God's oneness), risala (prophethood), and khilafah (vicegerency)—with the ummah's role confined to electing leaders committed to Sharia enforcement, as seen in his advocacy for Pakistan's Islamization post-1947.[51] Critics within Islamic scholarship note that such systems prioritize juristic interpretation over electoral mandates, effectively merging theocratic control with procedural democracy.[52] In Shia Islamist thought, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's doctrine of Velayat-e Faqih (guardianship of the jurist), formalized in his 1970 book Islamic Government, establishes a hierarchical guardianship where a qualified cleric assumes absolute authority in the occultation of the Twelfth Imam.[53] Implemented in Iran's 1979 constitution, this entails the Supreme Leader—selected by an Assembly of Experts—overseeing elected institutions like the presidency and parliament, with powers to appoint judiciary heads, military commanders, and veto legislation deemed un-Islamic.[54] Khomeini justified this as an extension of prophetic and Imamic authority, arguing that lay Muslims lack competence to govern without clerical supervision, thus framing democracy as a tool for Islamic ends rather than an end itself.[55] The system's dual structure, blending popular elections with juristic veto (e.g., the Guardian Council's disqualification of over 7,000 candidates in 2021 elections), exemplifies guardianship as a mechanism to align governance with fiqh (jurisprudence) amid claims of democratic participation.[56] Both conceptions reflect a causal prioritization of Sharia over electoral outcomes, where democratic elements like voting serve to legitimize rule but are circumscribed by unelected religious authorities, differing from secular models by vesting ultimate veto in divine interpretation rather than majority will. Maududi's Sunni theo-democracy influenced groups like the Muslim Brotherhood, while Khomeini's Shia guardianship has exported via Iran's alliances, yet empirical outcomes in Pakistan and Iran reveal tensions, with elected Islamists often curtailed by doctrinal guardians.[57][58]Reformist and Modernist Reconciliations
Islamic modernists in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, such as Jamal al-Din al-Afghani (1838–1897) and Muhammad Abduh (1849–1905), sought to harmonize Islamic principles with contemporary political institutions by reviving ijtihad (independent reasoning) and interpreting shura (consultation) as akin to representative governance. Abduh, in particular, argued that shura constitutes an obligatory Islamic mechanism for collective decision-making, not merely advisory but foundational to legitimate rule, and compatible with parliamentary systems provided they align with divine ethical norms rather than Western secularism per se.[59][60] He contended that Islamic law lacks rigid prescriptions for executive selection, allowing adaptation to modern electoral processes while rejecting absolute monarchy or unchecked autocracy as un-Islamic.[61] Building on this, mid-20th-century reformists like Fazlur Rahman (1919–1988) advanced a "double movement" methodology: a return to the Quran's ethical core unmediated by medieval scholasticism, coupled with forward-looking reinterpretation for political modernity. In Islam and Modernity (1982), Rahman critiqued historical Sunni political thought for stagnating in rationalization of existing power structures post-caliphate, advocating instead for dynamic ethical reconstruction where democratic participation fulfills Quranic imperatives for justice (adl) and public welfare (maslaha).[62][63] He viewed popular sovereignty not as idolatrous but as a delegated human responsibility under divine oversight, provided legislation remains tethered to maqasid al-sharia (objectives of Islamic law) like equity and freedom, rather than literalist enforcement.[64] Contemporary reformists, exemplified by Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im (born 1946), extend these efforts toward a secular constitutional framework, arguing that historical sharia application has conflated divine revelation with fallible human interpretation, necessitating institutional separation of religion and state to enable genuine Islamic pluralism and democracy. Influenced by Sudanese reformer Mahmoud Muhammad Taha (1909–1985), An-Na'im's Toward an Islamic Reformation (1990) posits that post-M Medina Quranic norms—emphasizing personal piety over coercive governance—support civil liberties, human rights, and electoral accountability, while pre-M Medina texts reflect contextual abrogated phases unfit for universal rule.[65][66] He insists that theocratic models inherently undermine free belief (i'tiqad hur), as mandated by Quran 2:256 ("no compulsion in religion"), and that democratic legitimacy arises from ongoing communal ijtihad rather than clerical veto.[67] These reconciliations often hinge on prioritizing ethical universals over juridical particularism, positing democracy as an evolving madhhab (school) within Islam's adaptable tradition, though critics from traditionalist quarters contend such views dilute sovereignty (hakimiyyah) to God's law. Empirical application remains contested, with reformist ideas influencing intellectual discourse more than state practice, as seen in limited adoption amid persistent authoritarianism in many Muslim contexts.[47][68]Secular and Liberal Critiques from Within Islam
Secular and liberal Muslim intellectuals have advanced critiques of integrating Islamic jurisprudence directly into state governance, arguing that such models inherently conflict with principles of equal citizenship, individual autonomy, and popular sovereignty essential to liberal democracy. These thinkers, often drawing on reinterpretations of Islamic history and theology, contend that enforcing sharia as state law leads to coercion, discrimination against non-Muslims and dissenters, and stagnation in religious practice, which they view as antithetical to the voluntary piety emphasized in early Islamic sources like the Constitution of Medina. Rather than rejecting Islam outright, they advocate for its decoupling from political authority to foster genuine ethical adherence through personal conviction rather than institutional mandate.[67] Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im, a Sudanese-American legal scholar identifying as Muslim, exemplifies this perspective in his 2008 work Islam and the Secular State, where he posits that modern enforcement of sharia by the state violates universal human rights norms and the pluralistic foundations of the Prophet Muhammad's Medina community, which accommodated Jews and pagans without religious supremacy. An-Na'im critiques the post-colonial revival of theocratic governance in countries like Iran and Sudan as a distortion driven by 20th-century political Islamists, arguing that true Islamic ethics require a neutral state to prevent the corruption of faith by power; without separation, religious freedom becomes illusory, as minority sects and secular Muslims face marginalization.[69] He grounds this in an appeal to continuous ijtihad (independent reasoning), asserting that historical caliphal practices never fully merged religion and state in a coercive manner, and contemporary theocracies exacerbate sectarian divides rather than resolving them.[70] Iranian philosopher Abdolkarim Soroush offers a related critique, emphasizing that rigid clerical interpretations of Islam, such as Iran's velayat-e faqih (guardianship of the jurist), subordinate human reason and pluralism to purported divine absolutes, thereby undermining democracy's core of fallible, deliberative governance. In essays compiled in Reason, Freedom, and Democracy in Islam (2000), Soroush argues that religious knowledge is human and evolving, not static revelation, so state-imposed orthodoxy stifles the "contraction of religious understanding" needed for coexistence with secular modernity; he rejects the notion that sovereignty derives solely from God (hakimiyyah), insisting instead that democratic legitimacy arises from individual rights and consent, which align with Islam's ethical imperatives when freed from authoritarian theology.[71] Similarly, Iranian cleric Mohsen Kadivar has declared the Shiite theocratic model in Iran a failure by 2009, critiquing its fusion of religious and political authority as leading to rights abuses and military dictatorship, and advocating constitutional democracy with clerical influence limited to moral guidance rather than veto power.[72] Syrian-German scholar Bassam Tibi, from a Muslim background, extends these arguments against Islamism's claim to democratic credentials, asserting in analyses from the 2000s onward that prioritizing sharia over pluralistic civil law renders Islamist governance incompatible with liberal democracy's emphasis on equality and secular neutrality.[5] Tibi critiques movements like the Muslim Brotherhood for masking totalitarian impulses under electoral rhetoric, arguing that authentic reform requires Muslims to embrace Euro-Islam—a culturally adapted faith supporting human rights without state enforcement—lest political Islam perpetuate cultural isolation and rejection of democratic pluralism.[73] These internal critiques highlight a tension: while traditionalists view secularism as apostasy, liberal reformers see it as essential for Islam's survival in a globalized world, warning that theocratic experiments empirically yield authoritarianism rather than just governance.[74]Public Opinion Among Muslims
Global Surveys on Support for Democracy and Sharia
A 2013 Pew Research Center survey of over 38,000 Muslims in 39 countries revealed widespread support for establishing Sharia as the official law of the land, with regional medians exceeding 70% in South Asia (84%), the Middle East-North Africa (74%), Southeast Asia (77%), and Sub-Saharan Africa (64%).[4] Specific countries showed even higher endorsement, including Afghanistan (99%), Iraq (91%), Pakistan (84%), and Malaysia (86%), while support was lower in parts of Central Asia and Southern-Eastern Europe, such as Kazakhstan (10%) and Azerbaijan (8%).[4] Among Sharia proponents, a majority typically favored applying it only to Muslim citizens, though exceptions existed in countries like Egypt (74% in favor of applying to non-Muslims) and Jordan (58%).[4] The same Pew survey documented concurrent support for democracy as the optimal form of government, with regional medians ranging from 45% in South Asia to 72% in Sub-Saharan Africa, and majorities across regions preferring representative democracy over rule by a strong leader.[75] This dual endorsement often aligned with preferences for religious leaders to influence political affairs, with medians of 66-72% across regions favoring such involvement, indicating a conception of governance integrating democratic mechanisms with Islamic legal supremacy rather than secular liberalism.[75]| Region | Median Support for Sharia as Official Law (%) | Median Support for Democracy as Best System (%) |
|---|---|---|
| South Asia | 84 | 45 |
| Middle East-North Africa | 74 | 55 |
| Southeast Asia | 77 | 64 |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 64 | 72 |
| Central Asia | Lower (e.g., 10-42 by country) | 52 |
Sectarian and Regional Variations in Attitudes
Support for implementing sharia as official law varies significantly across Muslim-majority regions, with medians of 84% in South Asia, 77% in Southeast Asia, 74% in the Middle East-North Africa, 64% in sub-Saharan Africa, and only 18% in Central Asia and Southern/Eastern Europe, according to a 2013 Pew Research Center survey of 38,000 Muslims in 39 countries.[75] These differences reflect cultural, historical, and governance factors, where higher sharia endorsement often correlates with preferences for religiously guided rather than fully secular democratic systems, though explicit support for democracy as a form of government remains widespread globally.[4] In Southeast Asia, attitudes show a notable compatibility between democratic practice and Islamic governance preferences; for instance, 85% of Indonesians in a 2023 Pew survey viewed democracy as the best system for solving national problems, despite 72% favoring sharia as official law in earlier data, enabling hybrid models in Indonesia and Malaysia where elections coexist with Islamic family laws.[78][4] In contrast, Middle East-North Africa (MENA) regions exhibit high verbal endorsement of democracy—73% or more across eight countries in Arab Barometer's 2023-2024 Wave VIII survey—but with variations tied to instability and economic perceptions, such as increases in support in Morocco (+19 points since prior waves) and Jordan (84%), alongside declines in Lebanon (-7 points), often prioritizing order and anti-corruption over liberal freedoms.[79] South Asia, particularly Pakistan and Afghanistan, displays stronger sharia prioritization (84% median), with lower democratic consolidation, as 99% of Afghan Muslims and 84% of Pakistanis supported sharia in 2013 Pew data, contributing to electoral Islamist dominance over pluralistic norms.[75][80] Sectarian differences are less pronounced in direct democracy support but evident in religious law preferences; Shia Muslims expressed greater favor for strictly Quran-based laws (35%) than Sunnis (20%) in a 2011 Pew survey across six Muslim-majority countries, potentially reflecting doctrinal emphasis on clerical authority in Twelver Shiism, as seen in Iran's velayat-e faqih system where public dissatisfaction with theocratic "democracy" runs high despite ritual elections.[81] In mixed-sect contexts like Iraq (Shia-majority), 72% viewed elections as essential in 2023-2024 Arab Barometer data, compared to Bahrain where both Sunni elites and Shia respondents shared positive views on governance stability but diverged on power-sharing.[79][82] Sunni attitudes, dominant in MENA and South Asia, often align with regional trends favoring sharia-influenced democracy, though Salafi subsets reject popular sovereignty outright; overall, sectarian divides appear amplified by geopolitical rivalries rather than inherent theological incompatibility with elections.[83] These variations underscore that while empirical surveys indicate broad Muslim endorsement of democratic mechanisms like voting—often exceeding 70% regionally—attitudes toward their substance diverge, with Southeast Asian pragmatism contrasting MENA's instability-driven skepticism and South Asia's theocratic leanings, influenced by local histories of colonial legacies, resource distributions, and Islamist mobilization rather than uniform Islamic doctrine.[84][75]Practical Implementation in Muslim-Majority Countries
Partial or Hybrid Democracies: Indonesia, Malaysia, and Tunisia
Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim-majority nation with over 87% of its 278 million people identifying as Muslim, operates as a flawed or hybrid democracy under its Pancasila ideology, which mandates belief in one God but rejects theocracy. Multiparty elections have been held regularly since the 1998 transition from Suharto's authoritarian rule, with the 2024 presidential election won by Prabowo Subianto amid concerns over religious polarization and Islamist influences.[85] The Economist Intelligence Unit's Democracy Index 2024 classifies Indonesia as a flawed democracy with a score of approximately 6.5-7.0, reflecting competitive elections but weaknesses in civil liberties due to blasphemy laws and intolerance toward religious minorities.[86] Freedom House rates it Partly Free, scoring 61/100 in 2024, citing restrictions on freedom of expression and assembly influenced by conservative Islamic groups. While Islamist parties like the Prosperous Justice Party participate in elections, they hold limited power, and mobilization for sharia implementation remains marginal, though events like the 2017 blasphemy conviction of Jakarta's Christian governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama highlight tensions between democratic pluralism and Islamic orthodoxy.[87] Malaysia functions as a constitutional monarchy with parliamentary democracy, where Islam is the official religion and sharia courts apply to Muslims in personal matters, creating a hybrid legal system that prioritizes Malay-Muslim privileges under Article 153 of the constitution.[88] Competitive elections occur, but the Barisan Nasional coalition dominated until 2018, and the system favors ethnic Malays, comprising about 60% of the population who are predominantly Muslim.[89] The EIU Democracy Index 2024 scores Malaysia at 7.11, categorizing it as a flawed democracy due to electoral manipulations, media restrictions, and ethnic-based policies that undermine equality.[86] Freedom House assesses it as Partly Free with a 53/100 score in 2024, noting government control over Islamic institutions and hudud law debates in states like Kelantan. In 2024, the Federal Court struck down 16 sharia criminal laws in Kelantan as unconstitutional, encroaching on federal powers, yet this provoked Islamist backlash and underscores ongoing conflicts between democratic federalism and state-level sharia expansionism.[90] Non-Muslims face conversion restrictions and apostasy bans, limiting full religious freedom and illustrating how Islamic constitutional provisions constrain liberal democratic norms.[91] Tunisia, once hailed as the Arab Spring's democratic success with its 2014 constitution balancing Islam and secularism, has regressed into a hybrid authoritarian system under President Kais Saied since his 2021 self-coup, suspending parliament and rewriting the constitution.[92] Ennahda, an Islamist party, won elections post-2011 but compromised on sharia non-inclusion in the constitution, yet public support for sharia remains high at around 50-60% in surveys.[93] The EIU Democracy Index 2024 rates Tunisia at 4.71, a hybrid regime, down from prior years due to executive overreach and suppressed opposition.[94] Freedom House scores it Partly Free at 49/100 in 2024, highlighting arrests of critics, media censorship, and judicial purges that eroded post-revolutionary gains.[95] Saied's 2024 reelection amid boycotts and repression of rivals like Ennahda leaders reflects disillusionment with Islamist governance and economic woes, but his populist authoritarianism exploits anti-Islamist sentiment while maintaining nominal elections, revealing democracy's fragility in a society where Islamic identity influences but does not fully dictate politics.[96][97]Islamist-Led Regimes: Iran, Sudan, and Afghanistan Post-2021
In Iran, the Islamic Republic operates under a hybrid system established by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1979, where ultimate authority rests with the Supreme Leader, currently Ali Khamenei, who oversees the armed forces, judiciary, and state media while appointing key positions including half the members of the Guardian Council.[98] The Guardian Council, comprising six clerics appointed by the Supreme Leader and six jurists nominated by the judiciary head (also Supreme Leader-appointed), vets all candidates for presidential, parliamentary, and Assembly of Experts elections, disqualifying those deemed insufficiently loyal to Islamic principles or the regime, as seen in the 2021 presidential election where thousands of candidates were barred, ensuring hard-line dominance.[99][100] While elections occur regularly, they lack democratic integrity due to this clerical veto power, suppression of opposition via arrests and media censorship, and the Council's ability to override parliamentary laws conflicting with its interpretation of Sharia, subordinating popular will to theocratic guardianship.[101] Afghanistan, following the Taliban's military victory and U.S. withdrawal in August 2021, has been governed as the Islamic Emirate under supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada, who holds absolute authority without elections or legislative checks, enforcing a strict Deobandi interpretation of Sharia that rejects democratic mechanisms as un-Islamic innovations.[102] The regime, led nominally by Prime Minister Mullah Hasan Akhund, has disbanded previous democratic institutions, banned women's participation in most public life, and imposed hudud punishments without judicial independence, with no national elections held or planned since the takeover, as the Taliban views sovereignty as deriving from divine law rather than popular consent.[103][104] This structure echoes the Taliban's 1996-2001 rule, prioritizing Islamist purity over pluralism, resulting in international isolation and humanitarian crises exacerbated by exclusionary governance.[105] Sudan post-2021 exemplifies Islamist resistance to democratic transition amid military rule, following the October 2021 coup by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan that dissolved the civilian-military power-sharing Sovereign Council established after Omar al-Bashir's 2019 ouster, derailing planned 2023 elections and reverting to authoritarian control with lingering Islamist influences from Bashir's National Congress Party era.[106][107] Islamist factions, regrouping covertly, have aligned with the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in the ongoing civil war against the Rapid Support Forces since April 2023, opposing secular reforms and fueling violence to prevent a return to the 2019 pro-democracy gains, as evidenced by their sabotage of transitional agreements and promotion of Sharia-based governance.[108][109] Sudan's democratic backsliding, marked by no free elections and widespread human rights abuses, underscores how Islamist elements prioritize ideological control over electoral accountability, contributing to state fragility and conflict.[110] These regimes illustrate a pattern where Islamist leadership frames democracy as subordinate to or incompatible with Sharia supremacy, leading to theocratic vetoes, electoral manipulation, or outright rejection of voting as the basis for rule, prioritizing clerical or mujtahid authority over secular pluralism.[57] Empirical outcomes include low freedom scores—Iran classified as "not free" with systemic repression, Afghanistan under Taliban rule scoring zero on political rights, and Sudan in democratic regression amid Islamist-military entrenchment—highlighting causal tensions between absolutist Islamic governance and core democratic tenets like equal sovereignty and contestable power.[101][104][107]Authoritarian Secular States with Islamic Influences: Turkey and Egypt
Turkey, established as a secular republic in 1923 under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, enshrined laiklik (a state-controlled form of secularism) in its constitution, separating religion from governance while restricting public expressions of Islam to foster national identity.[111] Since the Justice and Development Party (AKP) under Recep Tayyip Erdoğan assumed power in 2002, policies have gradually incorporated Islamic influences, such as lifting the 1980 ban on headscarves in universities in 2008 and expanding religious education in curricula, reflecting appeals to conservative Muslim voters.[112] [113] However, this shift has coincided with authoritarian consolidation, including purges of the judiciary following the 2016 coup attempt—resulting in over 4,000 judges dismissed—and media control, with the government influencing 90% of outlets by 2023.[114] Elections occur regularly, but opposition figures like Istanbul mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu faced imprisonment threats in 2022, undermining electoral integrity.[115] The Economist Intelligence Unit's Democracy Index scored Turkey at 4.26 in 2024, classifying it as a hybrid regime, while Freedom House rated it "Not Free" with a 2024 score of 33/100, citing eroded checks and balances.[86] [116] Egypt's 2014 constitution under Abdel Fattah el-Sisi upholds secular governance, with Article 2 declaring Islamic Sharia's principles as a primary legislative source but subordinating it to civil law, a framework inherited from Gamal Abdel Nasser's post-1952 revolution emphasis on state control over religion. Sisi's regime, installed via 2013 military ouster of elected Islamist Mohamed Morsi, suppresses groups like the Muslim Brotherhood—designated terrorists in 2013—through mass arrests exceeding 60,000 since 2013 and executions, while promoting state-sanctioned Islam via mosque constructions and al-Azhar University's alignment with regime narratives.[117] [118] This blends authoritarian secularism with Islamic symbolism to legitimize rule, as seen in Sisi's 2016 religious discourse reforms curbing "extremist" preaching.[119] Parliamentary elections in 2020 yielded a 98% supermajority for Sisi allies amid opposition boycotts and irregularities, with presidential approval at 97% in 2018 under controlled conditions.[120] Freedom House classified Egypt "Not Free" in 2024 with a score of 18/100, highlighting arbitrary detentions and judicial politicization, while the EIU Democracy Index placed it among authoritarian regimes with scores below 3.00 in recent assessments.[121] [122] In both nations, secular constitutional structures persist amid authoritarian rule, where Islamic influences serve mobilizational or legitimizing roles rather than democratic pluralism; Turkey's AKP leverages piety for electoral dominance without yielding to opposition, and Egypt's military elite co-opts religion to neutralize Islamist rivals, perpetuating centralized power over liberal reforms.[123] [124] Empirical indices reflect stalled democratization, with no transition to full electoral accountability despite periodic voting, underscoring how hybrid Islamic-secular authoritarianism resists institutional pluralism.[125][126]Arab Spring Outcomes and Islamist Electoral Victories
The Arab Spring uprisings, beginning in Tunisia in December 2010 and spreading across North Africa and the Middle East in 2011, created opportunities for Islamist parties to participate in post-authoritarian elections after decades of repression under secular dictatorships. In Tunisia, the moderate Islamist Ennahda party secured victory in the October 23, 2011, constituent assembly elections, obtaining 89 of 217 seats with 41.47% of the vote, allowing it to lead a coalition government focused on drafting a new constitution.[127] Ennahda's success stemmed from its organizational strength and social service networks developed during Ben Ali's rule, positioning it as an alternative to the ousted regime's corruption.[128] In Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party dominated the 2011-2012 parliamentary elections, winning approximately 47% of seats, followed by its candidate Mohamed Morsi securing the presidency on June 24, 2012, with 51.73% of the vote in a runoff against Ahmed Shafik.[129] This marked the Brotherhood's first taste of executive power after years of operating as an opposition force under Mubarak. Islamist victories in both countries reflected their ability to mobilize voters disillusioned with secular autocracies, though secular and liberal groups were less organized post-uprising.[130] Outcomes diverged sharply. In Egypt, Morsi's administration pursued policies emphasizing Islamic governance, including a November 2012 constitutional declaration granting him expansive powers and a rushed Islamist-influenced constitution ratified in December 2012, which alienated non-Islamists and sparked mass protests culminating in the July 3, 2013, military coup led by Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.[131] The subsequent crackdown dismantled the Brotherhood, designating it a terrorist organization and restoring military-backed authoritarianism, with Egypt's democracy index plummeting. In Tunisia, Ennahda adopted a more pragmatic approach, compromising with secular partners to adopt a 2014 constitution balancing Islamic identity with rights protections, facilitating a power transfer after 2014 elections; however, political instability persisted, leading to President Kais Saied's 2021 suspension of parliament and constitutional changes consolidating executive authority, marking a democratic backslide by 2024.[132][131] Elsewhere, such as Libya, Islamist parties like the Justice and Construction Party gained seats in the July 2012 General National Congress elections but failed to achieve dominance, with secular and tribal factions prevailing amid rapid descent into militia fragmentation and civil war by 2014.[133] These electoral gains for Islamists highlighted their electoral appeal in transitional contexts but often faltered due to governance challenges, ideological rigidity, and opposition from entrenched elites or militaries, underscoring tensions between Islamist agendas prioritizing sharia implementation and pluralistic democratic norms. By 2024, none of the Arab Spring states that saw Islamist victories sustained liberal democracies, reverting to authoritarianism or instability.[134]Empirical Assessments and Indices
Democracy Index Scores for Muslim-Majority Countries (EIU 2024 Data)
The Economist Intelligence Unit's (EIU) Democracy Index 2024 evaluates 167 countries and territories on a 0-10 scale, aggregating scores from 60 indicators across five categories: electoral process and pluralism, functioning of government, political participation, political culture, and civil liberties. Regimes are classified as full democracies (8.01-10), flawed democracies (6.01-8.00), hybrid regimes (4.01-6.00), or authoritarian (below 4.01). Muslim-majority countries—defined as those with over 50% Muslim population—predominantly fall into the authoritarian category, reflecting systemic challenges in electoral fairness, civil liberties, and political culture. The global average score declined to 5.17 in 2024, its lowest since the index's inception in 2006, but scores for these countries are markedly lower on average, with only two classified as flawed democracies.[135][86] The following table summarizes 2024 scores for Muslim-majority countries covered in the index (Afghanistan, Brunei, Kosovo, Maldives, and Somalia are not included, likely due to data limitations or ongoing instability). Malaysia leads with 7.11 (rank 44, flawed democracy), driven by relatively strong electoral processes and participation, though undermined by government functioning and political culture issues. Indonesia follows at 6.44 (rank 59, flawed democracy), benefiting from competitive elections but hampered by pluralism deficits. Hybrid regimes like Senegal (5.93, rank 74) and Morocco (4.97, rank 91) show partial pluralism, while the rest—over 80% of the list—are authoritarian, often scoring below 3.00 due to suppressed civil liberties and executive dominance, as seen in Syria (1.32, rank 163) and Sudan (1.46, rank 162).[86]| Country | Rank | Score | Regime Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Malaysia | 44 | 7.11 | Flawed Democracy |
| Indonesia | 59 | 6.44 | Flawed Democracy |
| Albania | 66 | 6.20 | Hybrid Regime |
| Senegal | 74 | 5.93 | Hybrid Regime |
| Tunisia | 93 | 4.71 | Hybrid Regime |
| Morocco | 91 | 4.97 | Hybrid Regime |
| Gambia | 99 | 4.47 | Hybrid Regime |
| Sierra Leone | 102 | 4.32 | Hybrid Regime |
| Bangladesh | 100= | 4.44 | Hybrid Regime |
| Turkey | 103= | 4.26 | Authoritarian |
| Mauritania | 108 | 3.96 | Authoritarian |
| Lebanon | 109 | 3.56 | Authoritarian |
| Algeria | 110 | 3.55 | Authoritarian |
| Kyrgyzstan | 111 | 3.52 | Authoritarian |
| Jordan | 115 | 3.28 | Authoritarian |
| Qatar | 117 | 3.17 | Authoritarian |
| Kazakhstan | 118 | 3.08 | Authoritarian |
| United Arab Emirates | 119 | 3.07 | Authoritarian |
| Oman | 120 | 3.05 | Authoritarian |
| Iraq | 126= | 2.80 | Authoritarian |
| Azerbaijan | 126= | 2.80 | Authoritarian |
| Pakistan | 124= | 2.84 | Authoritarian |
| Comoros | 124= | 2.84 | Authoritarian |
| Kuwait | 130 | 2.78 | Authoritarian |
| Djibouti | 132 | 2.70 | Authoritarian |
| Libya | 140 | 2.31 | Authoritarian |
| Mali | 139 | 2.40 | Authoritarian |
| Bahrain | 138 | 2.45 | Authoritarian |
| Burkina Faso | 137 | 2.55 | Authoritarian |
| Egypt | 128= | 2.79 | Authoritarian |
| Guinea | 149 | 2.04 | Authoritarian |
| Uzbekistan | 146 | 2.10 | Authoritarian |
| Saudi Arabia | 148 | 2.08 | Authoritarian |
| Iran | 154 | 1.96 | Authoritarian |
| Yemen | 155 | 1.95 | Authoritarian |
| Tajikistan | 159 | 1.83 | Authoritarian |
| Chad | 158 | 1.89 | Authoritarian |
| Turkmenistan | 161 | 1.66 | Authoritarian |
| Sudan | 162 | 1.46 | Authoritarian |
| Syria | 163 | 1.32 | Authoritarian |
| Guinea-Bissau | 150= | 2.03 | Authoritarian |