Resources · Learn, verify, act

Use the warning. Do not just absorb it.

Democracy Redline is meant to help readers move from concern to clarity. This resource hub gives you a practical path: understand the score, inspect the evidence, compare outside trackers, take lawful civic action, and share the warning without exaggeration.

Four ways to use this page.

The resource library is organized around the reader journey. Start with the warning, verify what supports it, widen the lens with outside sources, then choose a lawful and useful next step.

Understand

Understand the warning

Read the current analysis, formal report, archive, and methodology so the score has context.

Jump to understanding tools
Verify

Track the evidence

Use the evidence hub and outside democracy trackers to compare the project against public records and independent research.

Jump to evidence resources
Act

Take lawful action

Move concern into practical civic behavior: contact officials, support guardrails, volunteer locally, and protect reliable information.

Jump to action resources
Share

Share carefully

Use copy-ready language and graphics designed to inform people without rumor, rage, or partisan overreach.

Jump to share tools

Do not treat one page, one score, or one headline as the whole story.

Democratic backsliding is cumulative. The best way to read this site is to compare the current score against the monthly archive, the evidence spine, formal reports, and outside trackers. This page is built to make that comparison easier.

First: read the current warning and the formal June report.
Second: inspect the evidence and methodology behind the score.
Third: compare against outside indices, trackers, watchdogs, courts, and election sources.
Publishing continuity

See how each monthly warning is reviewed, published, and preserved.

Open publishing standard

The Resources page helps readers learn, verify, act, and share. The Publishing Standard explains the internal discipline behind the monthly record: intake, review, evidence sorting, report packaging, correction notes, and post-publish QA.

For plain-English counter-programming

Use Democracy Deprogramming when people need the idea, not just the source list.

Explore Deprogramming

Resources help people verify claims. Democracy Deprogramming helps people understand the rhetoric, fallacies, psychology, and marketing tricks that make anti-democratic ideas sound normal.

Understand the Warning

The project’s own public record.

These are the core Democracy Redline pages for reading the current warning, comparing month-to-month movement, and understanding how the score is produced.

Current warning

Latest analysis

Start here for the current month’s public warning, top score drivers, countervailing brakes, and category movement.

Open latest analysis
Formal record

Monthly reports

Use formal reports for the structured monthly record, durable summaries, and downloadable PDFs.

Open report library
Historical context

Archive

Compare June against May, April, and the earlier backfilled baseline to see progression, persistence, and acceleration.

Open archive
Scoring logic

Methodology

See the nine-category rubric, weighted framework, risk bands, evidence discipline, and monthly review process.

Read methodology
Orientation Maps

Two visual maps for reading democratic stress.

These visuals give readers a shared vocabulary before they dive into monthly scores, reports, and outside sources. Click or tap the images to enlarge them.

Forms of government are not a single left-right line.

This chart maps government systems across several dimensions at once: who holds power, where sovereignty sits, how institutions are structured, and what economic or social arrangements shape public life.

Democratic backsliding rarely announces itself as a clean switch from “democracy” to “dictatorship.” Erosion usually appears as movement inside the system: weakened checks, concentrated executive power, captured institutions, degraded civil liberties, or elections that remain in place while the safeguards around them shrink.

Use this chart as a reader’s orientation tool. It shows why the project focuses less on labels and more on institutional behavior: whether power is accountable, rights are protected, elections are meaningful, and the rule of law can still constrain those who govern.

Forms of Government chart showing a Democracy Redline taxonomy of sovereignty models, power sources, structural arrangements, and socio-economic attributes across different government systems.
Foundational chart 1: a broad taxonomy of government systems. It helps readers see that democratic backsliding is often movement across institutional features, not a sudden switch from one simple label to another.
Core Frameworks of Democracy chart showing representative government, fundamental rights, checks on government, impartial administration, and participatory engagement as mutually reinforcing democratic safeguards.
Foundational chart 2: the core democratic safeguards that make elections meaningful, constrain power, protect rights, and sustain public participation.

Democracy is a system of safeguards, not just a vote count.

This chart focuses inside the democracy spectrum. It shows the institutional frameworks that make democratic government meaningful: representative government, fundamental rights, checks on government, impartial administration, and participatory engagement.

A country can still hold elections while weakening courts, press freedom, civil liberties, administrative neutrality, or the public’s ability to participate. When those supports erode together, the system may still look democratic on the surface while becoming less capable of protecting popular control and political equality.

The monthly score is designed to watch that interaction. It asks whether democratic institutions are reinforcing one another, or whether failures in one area are beginning to cascade into others.

Representative governmentFundamental rightsChecks on governmentImpartial administrationParticipatory engagement
Track the Evidence

Outside resources for checking the broader record.

These links help readers compare Democracy Redline’s monthly warning against independent democracy indices, watchdog work, legal trackers, election administration resources, press freedom measures, and public-opinion research.

Outside resources inform the project. They do not automatically set the score.

Democracy Redline uses a weighted monthly rubric and editorial review. Outside sources help establish context, corroborate patterns, and identify candidate developments, but the monthly score depends on category relevance, documentation quality, severity, institutional reach, and repeat-pattern value.

Featured evidence resources

Start with these three.

Evidence spine

Democracy Redline evidence hub

The internal evidence hub explains what counts as evidence, what does not, and how monthly evidence notes support the score.

Open evidence hub
Democracy index

V-Dem Democracy Report

A major global democracy measurement project useful for understanding democratic decline, autocratization patterns, and comparative context.

Read V-Dem report
Action tracker

TrumpTracker

A public tracker for following executive actions and institutional developments relevant to the current U.S. stress test.

Open TrumpTracker
Democracy Measurement & Backsliding Frameworks

Indices and frameworks for recognizing democratic erosion.

Index

V-Dem Institute

Comparative democracy data, reports, and autocratization research across countries and time.

Open V-Dem
Index

Freedom House: Freedom in the World

Annual ratings and analysis of political rights and civil liberties around the world.

Open Freedom in the World
Survey project

Bright Line Watch

Recurring expert and public surveys focused on the performance of democratic principles in the United States.

Open Bright Line Watch
Explainer

Pew Research Center roundup

A useful comparison of multiple democracy indicators showing U.S. democratic decline in 2025.

Read Pew analysis
Index

Economist Intelligence Unit Democracy Index

Global democracy ranking tracking electoral process, civil liberties, political culture, participation, and government functioning.

Open EIU index
Framework

Protect Democracy: Authoritarian Playbook

A framework for separating authoritarian warning signs from ordinary political conflict.

Read the playbook
Courts, Rule of Law & Executive Power

Resources for following institutional checks and legal conflict.

Legal analysis

Lawfare

Institutional analysis of executive power, courts, national security, rule of law, and constitutional conflict.

Open Lawfare
Court tracker

SCOTUSblog

Supreme Court case tracking, argument coverage, decisions, and legal context.

Open SCOTUSblog
Policy research

Brennan Center for Justice

Research on courts, voting rights, election administration, redistricting, money in politics, and democratic reform.

Open Brennan Center
Threat tracker

Protect Democracy: Authoritarian Action Watch

A live tracker of authoritarian-action patterns and democratic pushback in the United States.

Open threat tracker
Election Administration & Voting Rights

Resources for tracking whether elections remain meaningful and fairly administered.

Legal tracker

Democracy Docket

Coverage and analysis focused on voting rights, elections, and election litigation in the courts.

Open Democracy Docket
Voting rights

Voting Rights Lab

State-level voting law analysis and resources for understanding election administration changes.

Open Voting Rights Lab
Election admin

NCSL Election Resources

Nonpartisan state-legislature resources on election law, administration, and state-level policy changes.

Open NCSL elections
Rights research

Brennan Center voting rights

Research and analysis on voting access, election administration, redistricting, and democratic participation.

Open voting-rights research
Press Freedom, Civil Liberties & Civic Confidence

Resources for tracking public safeguards and how people experience institutional strain.

Press freedom

Reporters Without Borders

Global tracking of press freedom, useful for monitoring one of Democracy Redline’s key institutional categories.

Open press freedom index
Civil liberties

ACLU

Legal and advocacy work around civil liberties, due process, voting rights, protest rights, and constitutional protections.

Open ACLU
Polling

Pew Research Center

Public opinion research on institutional trust, democracy, polarization, rights, and political behavior.

Open Pew democracy research
Polling

AP-NORC Center

Polling and public-opinion research on government, democracy, trust, civic life, and current events.

Open AP-NORC
Polling

Gallup

Long-running public opinion data on trust in institutions, confidence in government, and democratic attitudes.

Open Gallup government topics
Take Lawful Action

Move concern into useful, peaceful civic behavior.

Democracy Redline does not promote threats, harassment, intimidation, or illegal activity. The action resources are designed to support institutional defense, public accountability, and peaceful civic participation.

Action guide

Action Toolkit

Copy-ready scripts, action levels, and lawful next steps for contacting officials and supporting democratic guardrails.

Open Action Toolkit
Officials

Find representatives

Use official lookup tools to identify your elected officials before calling, writing, or attending public meetings.

Find official lookup links
Local action

Start where you are

Local meetings, letters, volunteering, civic groups, election protection, and support for independent journalism all matter.

Choose an action level
Safety note

Stay lawful and peaceful

Focus on institutions, oversight, rights, elections, courts, and public accountability. Do not escalate into threats or intimidation.

Read the mission

Help people understand the warning without making it worse.

The Share Kit includes current-score graphics, score-movement cards, category-driver visuals, and copy-ready language for responsible sharing. Use it to help people read, verify, and act without rumor, rage, or unsupported claims.

Use the outside resources, then come back to the monthly public record.

The purpose of this page is to widen the lens. Democracy Redline still does its own monthly scoring work, but the project is strongest when readers can compare that warning against foundational civic frameworks, independent indices, legal trackers, watchdog work, and public records.