quality of public administration and the degree of protection of citizens' rights. The study
was conducted on the basis of publicly available official sources and international reports,
including the World Justice Project (2021, 2023, 2024) and Varieties of Democracy (V-
Dem Dataset, 2021-2023), as well as analytical reviews by Freedom House (2024) and
Transparency International (2024). These organizations systematically collect data based
on combined surveys of legal experts, civil society representatives, national statistical
agencies, and open government reports. For example, the World Justice Project annually
covers more than 214,000 respondents and about 3,500 experts in 142 countries using
a standardized questionnaire of eight indicators: limited government, absence of
corruption, open government, fundamental rights, security, regulatory activity, civil and
criminal justice (World Justice Project, 2024). The V-Dem data is compiled by more than
4,000 researchers who assess electoral, liberal, deliberative, and participatory
democracy using multidimensional models (V-Dem Institute, 2024b). The data was
selected for Ukraine, Poland, and Hungary for 2021-2024, which made it possible to trace
the dynamics of legal indicators in a country under martial law and compare it with
European countries with different levels of constitutional stability.
An analysis of statistical indicators suggests that Ukraine maintains relatively stable
positions in global rule of law rankings even in the face of a full-scale war. According to
the World Justice Project, the overall rule of law index decreased from 0.51 in 2021 to
0.47 in 2023, but increased to 0.49 in 2024, indicating gradual institutional adaptation.
For comparison, in 2024, Poland's index was approximately 0.61, and Hungary's was
0.43 (World Justice Project, 2024). According to the V-Dem index of electoral democracy
(v2x_polyarchy), Ukraine had a score of 0.415 in 2023, which is lower than Poland's 0.73
and Hungary's 0.63 (V-Dem Institute, 2024b; Our World in Data, 2024). These values
demonstrate that despite martial law and temporary restrictions on rights, the level of
democratic practices and legal culture remains moderately stable.
As can be seen from Table 1, the Rule of Law Index in Ukraine demonstrates a wave-like
dynamics – first, a decline under the influence of hostilities, and then a gradual recovery
in 2024.
The data show that even under martial law, Ukraine has not lost the basic institutional
foundations of the rule of law. Although some indicators – such as restrictions on rights
and freedoms, independence of the judiciary, or the level of corruption risks – have
deteriorated in the short term, the overall trend shows that legal institutions are resilient.
The score of 0.49 in 2024 demonstrates that the state mechanisms of legal control,
parliamentary oversight and civic monitoring continue to function despite the
extraordinary challenges. This confirms that it is possible to maintain a balance between
security and human rights even in times of deep crisis, which is consistent with the
findings of analytical reports by Freedom House (2024) and Transparency International
(2024). Thus, the quantitative indicators of international organizations confirm that
Ukraine is forming a unique model of legal stability that combines legal restrictions with
the desire to preserve democratic values and legal balance.