World Governance Index

The World Governance Index (WGI) is an indicator developed in 2008 by the Forum for a new World Governance (FnWG). It aims to provide, year on year, a precise image of the situation of world governance and of its evolution. Based on the picture it provides on where the world and its individual countries stand in terms of governance, this index is intended to allow those in charge of governance to raise the appropriate questions when thinking about solutions and remedies for what constitutes one of the major problems of the 20th century.

Background

If there is one topic that in the past 15 years or so that has been extensively written about, it is definitely world governance.[1] The magnitude of world governance is reflected by the exponential multiplication of books, articles, symposia, debates, and summits on its subject, whether to explore the many paths to it, to discuss the difficulties involved in it, or the requirements it brings to light.[2]

Developing a set of indicators in order to produce a World Governance Index (WGI) is a long and complex undertaking. The idea is to measure a contemporary concept which, in spite of the fact that it is historically rooted,[3] that there are frameworks in which it is currently applied, that it is implemented by identified actors,[4] and that there is agreement on the diagnosis of its afflictions,[5] it is as yet far from having been "stabilized."

Basing their work on the United Nations Millennium Declaration, which was the subject of unprecedented U.N. consensus among the heads of state and government who adopted it in 2000, a team of researchers of the Forum for a new World Governance (FnWG), made up of Gustavo Marín, Arnaud Blin, and Renaud François, focused its research on the five main concepts defining the application framework of world governance and constituting key goals to be reached by 2015:

What is the purpose of a WGI?

The research team considered its mission with two goals in mind:

Factors constituting the World Governance Index
Indicator Sub-indicator Index
Peace / Security National Security Conflicts
Refugees / Asylum Seekers
Displaced Persons
Public Security Political climate
Degree of trust
Violent Crime
Homicides / 100,000 inhabitants
Rule of Law Body of Laws Ratification of International Treaties
Protection of Property Rights
Legal System Independence
Effectiveness
Settlement of Contractual Disputes
Corruption Corruption Perceptions Index
Human Rights / Participation Civil and Political Rights Respect of Civil Rights
Respect of Physical Integrity Rights
Freedom of the Press
Violence against the Press
Participation Participation in Political Life
Electoral Process and Pluralism
Political Culture
Discrimination / Gender Inequalities Women's Political Rights
Women's Social Rights
Women's Economic Rights
Female Parliamentary Rate
Sustainable Development Economic Sector Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita
GDP Growth Rate
Inflation Rate
Ease in starting a business
Social Dimension Poverty Rate / Inequalities (Gini Coefficient)
Unemployment Rate
Ratification of International Labor Law Treaties
Environmental Dimension Ecological Footprint / Biocapacity
Environmental Sustainability
Environmental Performance Index
Human Development Development Human Development
Well-being / Happiness Subjective Well-being
Happiness

Methodology and databases

The 37 indexes constituting the WGI have been set on a scale from zero to one, a scale similar to the one developed by the United Nations Development Programme for its Human Development Index (HDI).

Although some of the indexes used (only 4 out of the 37) were drawn from databases that had not been updated since 2007, the 2008 World Governance Index nevertheless reflects the state of world governance in 2008.

The regional rankings are inspired from UNDP classification. The 179 countries surveyed in this study —microstates were deliberately not included in this list – were grouped into six regional subgroups:

Sources

World Governance Index: PDF document, 81 pages.

References

  1. "World governance" is also and often referred to as "global governance."
  2. As testified by any Internet search, over 64,000 books have been published in English since the mid-1990s on the topic of world or global governance. As for journals or magazines that have featured articles on the subject, they include a broad variety, from mainstream magazines to specialized journals from all over the world on anthropology, democracy, atomic science, current affairs, etc. It is naturally a key topic for the G-20 and countless other meetings, international or not. The WGI described here was developed within an Internet-based research project called the Forum for a new World Governance with funding from the Charles Léopold Mayer Foundation for Humankind.
  3. See the first chapter of Global Governance on Wikipedia.
  4. This includes, among others, the entire United Nations organization and the Bretton Woods institutions.
  5. Among several hundred converging diagnoses, see, for instance: World Humanity Action Trust (2000), "Governance for a Sustainable Future", Reports of the Commissions of the World Humanity Action Trust, Russell Press Ltd., Nottingham (UK), p. 30; (2009), O'Hara, P.A. (ed.), "Public Policy and Political Economy", International Encyclopedia of Public Policy - Governance in a Global Age, Vol. 3, Perth; "Environmental governance" on Wikipedia; "Current global governance systems lack capacity to deal with global risks" in Daily Financial Times, Wijeya Newspapers Ltd. Colombo (Sri Lanka), January 14, 2011; etc.
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