Rights Tracker

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Methodology

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rights tracker
All countries

Taiwan

How well is Taiwan respecting people's human rights?

Use the tabs below to explore the scores.

rights tracker

Taiwan at a glance

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Quality of Life

Economic and Social Rights

(2020)

Summary score

N/A

How well is Taiwan doing compared to what is possible at its level of income?

Right to

0

% of income adjusted benchmark achieved

HRMI score

100%

Very bad

Bad

Fair

Good


Safety from the State

Civil and Political Rights

(2022)

Summary score

8.0

How well is Taiwan's government respecting each right?

Right to freedom from

0

Score

10

Very bad

Bad

Fair

Good


Empowerment

Civil and Political Rights

(2022)

Summary score

7.4

How well is Taiwan's government respecting each right?

Right to

0

Score

10

Very bad

Bad

Fair

Good


Source: HRMI 2023 rightstracker.org

Quality of Life

Compared with all other high-income countries, Taiwan is performing close to average when we look across the rights for which we have data (this comparison is calculated using the 'Income adjusted' benchmark).

To change the performance benchmark or assessment standard, please click on ‘Switch view’ above

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Safety from the State

Taiwan's Safety from the State score of 8.0 out of 10 suggests that while most people are safe from government abuse, some may have experienced one or more of the following: arbitrary arrest, torture and ill-treatment, forced disappearance, execution or extrajudicial killing.

For the civil and political rights we do not have data for enough countries in East Asia and Pacific to do a regional comparison. However, compared to the other countries in our sample, Taiwan is performing better than average on the right to be safe from the state.

Empowerment

Taiwan's Empowerment score of 7.4 out of 10 suggests that while many people are enjoying their civil liberties and political freedoms (freedom of speech, assembly and association, and democratic rights), a significant number are not.

For the civil and political rights we do not have data for enough countries in East Asia and Pacific to do a regional comparison. However, compared to the other countries in our sample, Taiwan is performing better than average on empowerment rights.