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WORLD Constitutions 2024

Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria...and 190 more, 2024
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Reference ID
WLD_2024_WC_v01_M
Producer(s)
WORLD Policy Analysis Center
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Created on
Feb 19, 2026
Last modified
Feb 19, 2026
  • Study Description
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  • Identification

    Survey ID number

    WLD_2024_WC_v01_M

    Title

    WORLD Constitutions 2024

    Abbreviation or Acronym

    WC 2024

    Country
    Name Country code
    Afghanistan AFG
    Albania ALB
    Algeria DZA
    Andorra AND
    Angola AGO
    Antigua and Barbuda ATG
    Argentina ARG
    Armenia ARM
    Australia AUS
    Austria AUT
    Azerbaijan AZE
    Bahamas BHS
    Bahrain BHR
    Bangladesh BGD
    Barbados BRB
    Belarus BLR
    Belgium BEL
    Belize BLZ
    Benin BEN
    Bhutan BTN
    Bolivia BOL
    Bosnia and Herzegovina BIH
    Botswana BWA
    Brazil BRA
    Brunei BRN
    Bulgaria BGR
    Burkina Faso BFA
    Burundi BDI
    Cambodia KHM
    Cameroon CMR
    Canada CAN
    Cabo Verde CPV
    Central African Republic CAF
    Chad TCD
    Chile CHL
    China CHN
    Colombia COL
    Comoros COM
    Congo, Dem. Rep. COD
    Congo, Rep. COG
    Costa Rica CRI
    Cote d'Ivoire CIV
    Croatia HRV
    Cuba CUB
    Cyprus CYP
    Czechia CZE
    Denmark DNK
    Djibouti DJI
    Dominica DMA
    Dominican Republic DOM
    Ecuador ECU
    Egypt EGY
    El Salvador SLV
    Equatorial Guinea GNQ
    Eritrea ERI
    Estonia EST
    Ethiopia ETH
    Fiji FJI
    Finland FIN
    France FRA
    Gabon GAB
    Gambia, The GMB
    Georgia GEO
    Germany DEU
    Ghana GHA
    Greece GRC
    Grenada GRD
    Guatemala GTM
    Guinea GIN
    Guinea-Bissau GNB
    Guyana GUY
    Haiti HTI
    Honduras HND
    Hungary HUN
    Iceland ISL
    India IND
    Indonesia IDN
    Iran IRN
    Iraq IRQ
    Ireland IRL
    Israel ISR
    Italy ITA
    Jamaica JAM
    Japan JPN
    Jordan JOR
    Kazakhstan KAZ
    Kenya KEN
    Kiribati KIR
    Korea, Dem. People's Rep. PRK
    Korea, Rep. KOR
    Kuwait KWT
    Kyrgyzstan KGZ
    Laos LAO
    Latvia LVA
    Lebanon LBN
    Lesotho LSO
    Liberia LBR
    Libya LBY
    Liechtenstein LIE
    Lithuania LTU
    Luxembourg LUX
    North Macedonia MKD
    Madagascar MDG
    Malawi MWI
    Malaysia MYS
    Maldives MDV
    Mali MLI
    Malta MLT
    Marshall Islands MHL
    Mauritania MRT
    Mauritius MUS
    Mexico MEX
    Micronesia, Fed. Sts. FSM
    Moldova MDA
    Monaco MCO
    Mongolia MNG
    Montenegro MNE
    Morocco MAR
    Mozambique MOZ
    Myanmar MMR
    Namibia NAM
    Nauru NRU
    Nepal NPL
    Netherlands NLD
    New Zealand NZL
    Nicaragua NIC
    Niger NER
    Nigeria NGA
    Norway NOR
    Oman OMN
    Pakistan PAK
    Palau PLW
    Panama PAN
    Papua New Guinea PNG
    Paraguay PRY
    Peru PER
    Philippines PHL
    Poland POL
    Portugal PRT
    Qatar QAT
    Romania ROU
    Russian Federation RUS
    Rwanda RWA
    Samoa WSM
    San Marino SMR
    São Tomé and Príncipe STP
    Saudi Arabia SAU
    Senegal SEN
    Serbia SRB
    Seychelles SYC
    Sierra Leone SLE
    Singapore SGP
    Slovakia SVK
    Slovenia SVN
    Solomon Islands SLB
    Somalia SOM
    South Africa ZAF
    South Sudan SSD
    Spain ESP
    Sri Lanka LKA
    St. Kitts and Nevis KNA
    St. Lucia LCA
    St. Vincent and the Grenadines VCT
    Sudan SDN
    Suriname SUR
    Eswatini SWZ
    Sweden SWE
    Switzerland CHE
    Syria SYR
    Tajikistan TJK
    Tanzania TZA
    Thailand THA
    Timor-Leste TLS
    Togo TGO
    Tonga TON
    Trinidad and Tobago TTO
    Tunisia TUN
    Türkiye TUR
    Turkmenistan TKM
    Tuvalu TUV
    Uganda UGA
    Ukraine UKR
    United Arab Emirates ARE
    United Kingdom GBR
    United States USA
    Uruguay URY
    Uzbekistan UZB
    Vanuatu VUT
    Venezuela VEN
    Vietnam VNM
    Yemen YEM
    Zambia ZMB
    Zimbabwe ZWE
    Study type

    Other

    Abstract

    The WORLD Policy Analysis Center (WORLD) is committed to improving the quantity and quality of globally comparative data available to policymakers, citizens, civil society, and researchers on laws and policies that work to support human rights, including economic opportunity, social and civic engagement, human health, development, well-being, and equity. The WORLD Constitutions 2024 dataset was created to assess progress on constitutional rights that matter to equal opportunities through a systematic review of national constitutions across all 193 UN countries as of June 2024. The dataset covers equality and non-discrimination across race and/or ethnicity, gender and sex, migrants and refugees, religion and belief, disability status, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation, and gender identity, as well as the right to education, health, decent working conditions and non-discrimination in employment, and social protection.

    Kind of Data

    Other

    Unit of Analysis

    Laws

    Version

    Version Description

    Version 01: Edited anonymised data for distribution as public access share-alike data.

    Version Date

    2024

    Scope

    Notes

    Constitutional equality and non-discrimination across race and/or ethnicity, gender and sex, migrants and refugees, religion and belief, disability status, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation, and gender identity, as well as the right to education, health, decent working conditions and non-discrimination in employment, and social protection.

    Coverage

    Geographic Unit

    The data is at the level of country and includes all 193 UN member states

    Producers and sponsors

    Primary investigators
    Name Affiliation
    WORLD Policy Analysis Center University of California Los Angeles
    Funding Agency/Sponsor
    Name Role
    William & Flora Hewlett Foundation Funding agency
    Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Funding agency
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Funding agency
    Ford Foundation Funding agency

    Data collection

    Dates of Data Collection
    Start End
    2024 2024
    Supervision

    Ethics approval was not required because all data is from publicly available legislative texts

    Data Collection Notes

    WORLD examined constitutional and legal provisions as they set a foundation for rights and are a first step toward improving outcomes. Across countries, having laws on paper does make a difference in practice. Laws and constitutional rights lead to change by shaping public attitudes, encouraging government follow-through with inspections and implementation, and enabling court action for enforcement. Even when local enforcement is inadequate, laws may still have an impact by shaping the terms of political debate and providing levers for civil society advocates. Laws are a mechanism by which power can be democratically redistributed, changes in institutions can be created to ensure greater fairness, and a social floor guaranteeing minimum humane conditions can be established.

    DATA SOURCES
    In selecting data sources to analyze, our first priority is to identify sources containing full-text original legislation. To ensure the greatest level of accuracy and comparability across countries, we always aim to read the original laws (primary sources) rather than secondary summaries or policy descriptions. Primary sources allow for more accurate coding across countries, particularly in complex legal areas. Working with primary sources also allows us to provide excerpts or links to actual legislation and constitutions for those interested in passing new laws or creating reform in their countries. We review documents in their original language or in a translation into one of the UN's official languages.

    Secondary sources are used when information is unclear or insufficient for particular countries. In choosing these secondary sources, we prioritize those that are comparable across multiple countries, such as global or regional sources. When using information sources that cover a limited number of countries, we aim to ensure that the information they contain can be made consistent with other sources.

    This dataset relies exclusively on primary constitutional texts in force as of June 2024, in a constitution's original language whenever possible or translated into an official UN language when this was not possible. Additional legislation was included in the database only when the constitution explicitly referenced it. Although the vast majority of countries have codified written constitutions, a few countries (e.g., the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand and Israel) either have no written codified constitution or have a series of constitutional laws rather than a single text. In these cases, those documents or laws that are considered to be constitutional either by the country itself or by the legal community are used. Our current dataset is a reflection of what is explicitly written in constitutions. Litigation can play an important role in creating a body of jurisprudence that can further extend constitutional protections beyond what is contained in the constitutional text itself. Given that the scope of the project includes 193 UN countries, and that the role and strength of case law varies substantially across countries, we are unable to include an analysis of case law relevant to the rights reported. Including case law in future analyses will be important to understanding more fully the extent to which equal rights are protected in different countries.

    CODING FRAMEWORKS
    In this work, coding refers to the process of translating legislative, policy, or constitutional text into a set of features which can be quantitatively analyzed to provide readily understandable summaries of policy approaches across countries and transformed into data visualizations, such as maps or charts. For example, a researcher reviews many pieces of labor and social security legislation and uses them to answer questions such as: Does a country guarantee paid parental leave? Is it available to all parents, only mothers, or only fathers? How long is paid leave? What is the wage replacement rate? How long do workers need to have been employed to access paid leave?

    To answer these questions consistently across countries, we first identify the essential policy features that we want to capture, including intrinsic characteristics, such as coverage; important elements identified in policy research; and minimum standards recognized in global agreements, where they exist. Researchers then read legislative text from 20 to 30 countries to develop an understanding of the approaches countries take in each of these areas. A coding framework consisting of questions and close-ended responses is developed to capture the essential policy features systematically across countries based on the range of approaches identified. Research team members then test whether this coding framework accurately captures approaches on an additional ten to twenty nations.

    Once we have a viable framework, we seek feedback from civil society and researchers working in these areas to ensure the questions we are asking will provide the critical answers needed to inform policy debates. Their feedback can lead to more scoping and test coding to determine which questions are feasible to answer with available legislation, recognizing that some important areas aren't always covered by national laws and policies. For example, access to sanitation facilities and safe transportation matters deeply to girls' ability to complete their education but is rarely addressed in a meaningful way in national-level education laws and policies. In other cases, new areas of research might involve going beyond the initial legislation we planned to code, expanding the scale of the project.

    Capturing the richness and variety of approaches taken by different countries is our priority throughout the coding process.
    At times, research teams would have already analyzed 60 to 80 countries before coming across a single country whose approach to a particular problem was different enough in important ways that it could not be adequately captured within the coding scheme. In these cases, the coding scheme was revised to add the elements necessary to capture new features of legislation and policymaking that had presented themselves. All previously coded nations were reviewed to determine whether the revised coding system would alter how they were analyzed. In other words, the new coding system, better adapted to the full variety of approaches nations around the world take, was applied to all countries in the end.

    The data sources available contained systematic information on legislation and policies but not on implementation. To ensure consistent approaches across countries, reports that contained comprehensive information on policies but only limited incidental information on implementation were coded only for policies. Obtaining systematic sources of information on implementation should be a pressing priority for global organizations.

    CODING PROCESS
    Core to ensuring transparency and consistency is developing a codebook that details the rules and examples for coding each question. Researchers rely on this codebook to make decisions on coding policy features. The codebook is designed to be as straightforward as possible, but some questions require judgment calls. To minimize human error, we use a double coding system where two researchers independently code legal text for each country and then meet to compare their results. When two researchers cannot reach consensus based on the existing codebook, they bring these questions to the full coding team and senior analysts. This team meets regularly to discuss any questions or concerns that arise through the coding process. We record detailed minutes of these meetings and update the codebook to reflect any determinations that impact the coding rules.

    ACCURACY, ANALYSIS, AND UPDATING
    Upon completion of coding, we conduct systematic quality checks. We also carry out targeted checks of countries that appear as outliers globally or for their region or income level.

    For each of our data sets, we use the most up-to-date sources available. While this approach is designed to achieve accuracy, it is important to note that when publicly available sources have not been fully updated, the most recent amendments may not be captured in our data sets. Further, our process of coding legislation inevitably involves important matters of interpretation. For all data sets, we welcome receiving feedback and copies of laws from anyone who believes the data sets may not be fully up-to-date.

    Data Access

    Access authority
    Name Affiliation URL Email
    DataFirst University of Cape Town support.data1st.org support@data1st.org
    Access conditions

    Public access data for use under a Creative Commons CC-BY-SA (Attribution plus Share-Alike) License

    Citation requirements

    WORLD Policy Analysis Center (WORLD). WORLD Constitutions, 2024 [dataset]. Version 1. Los Angeles: WORLD Policy Analysis Center [producer], 2025. Cape Town: DataFirst [distributor], 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25828/x0em-7220

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email URL
    DataFirst Support University of Cape Town support@data1st.org www.support.data1st.org

    Metadata production

    DDI Document ID

    DDI_WLD_2024_WC_v01_M

    Producers
    Name Abbreviation Affiliation Role
    WORLD Policy Analysis Center WORLD University of California Los Angeles Metadata producer
    Development Data Group DECDG The World Bank Metadata adapted for World Bank Microdata Library
    Date of Metadata Production

    2025-09-25

    Metadata version

    DDI Document version

    Identical to a metadata (int-world-wc-2024-v1) published on DataFirst microdata repository (https://www.datafirst.uct.ac.za/dataportal/index.php/catalog). Some of the metadata fields have been edited.

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