Monday, January 17, 2011

Statistics fun: Freedom House vs. HRW


Elder of Ziyon

I am no math wizard, but I was wondering after my last blog post if there was any correlation - positive or negative - between the scores that Freedom House uses to determine how free a country is, and how much attention that country receives by Human Rights Watch, in the Middle East and North Africa region (MENA.)

I calculated Freedom House's score by adding their two values for political rights and civil liberties, each on a scale of 1-7, so the freest countries would have a score of 2 and the least free a score of 14. I used Google to estimate the number of mentions of each country at the HRW.com site.

Here is a chart with the raw numbers.


Country HRW mentions Freedom House score
Oman 328 11
Qatar 456 11
Bahrain 460 11
Algeria 787 11
Yemen 999 11
Morocco 1060 9
Kuwait 1130 9
UAE(+United Arab Emirates) 1200 11
Libya 1240 14
Jordan 1300 11
Lebanon 1450 8
Syria 1510 13
Tunisia 1530 12
Egypt 1930 11
Iraq 2170 11
Israel 3940 3
Saudi Arabia 4140 13
Iran 5730 12


And graphically (I normalized the freedom score to put them on the same visual scale):


In a sane world, one would expect a positive correlation between how unfree a nation is and how many mentions it receives in Human Rights Watch. However, there is practically no correlation between the two mathematically in the MENA region - in fact, there is a weak negative correlation between them (-0.13).

Perhaps a reader will take it upon himself to see if this lack or correlation extends to other parts of the world, or if it is only in the Middle East that HRW's emphasis is so skewed.

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