Rule of law – POLITICO

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And on that front, Europe has an advantage.

Speaking at a global real-estate conference recently, I was struck by a recurring theme: the European continent as a safe haven. Real estate is, of course, a long-term kind of business. Real-estate investors have to have faith in the neighborhoods, cities, countries they’re buying properties in. And as the conference went on, executive after executive returned to Europe as a safe place to do business in because — well, because it’s true.

Rule of law is regressing all over the world. According to the World Justice Project’s Rule of Law Index, nearly seven in 10 countries saw a decline in rule of law in 2025. This, the World Justice Project notes, is connected to growing authoritarianism.

Europe, though, is standing strong: Denmark leads the ranking, followed by Norway, Finland, Sweden, New Zealand, Germany, Luxembourg, Ireland, the Netherlands and Australia. Places 11 through 20 are also occupied by European countries, along with Canada, Japan, Singapore and South Korea. The U.S. comes in 27th.

For businesses, rule of law is not just nice to have; it’s a necessity. Imagine a company trying to make decisions without knowing whether a country’s laws will even matter: impossible. Businesses can operate in a few legally risky countries, but their core must be in nations that respect rule of law.

A woman with her small dog looks at rental property listings displayed in the window of a real estate agency in France on May 27, 2026. | Thibaut Durand/AFP via Getty Images

And outside the safe bubble that is Europe — with honorable mentions going to the Rule of Law Index’s other top performers — things are increasingly unsafe. In addition to deteriorating rule of law, there’s more geopolitical turbulence and even wars.