State of Israel
National government and sovereign state
of 100 · unstable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
47/100
Raw Score
42/85
Confidence
78%
Evidence
Strong
About
The State of Israel is a high-capacity government with real democratic institutions, broad social insurance, strong public administration, and globally significant science and security capabilities. It does not score well on goodness alignment because those strengths are repeatedly undercut by unresolved inequality between Jews and Palestinians, recent attempts to weaken judicial constraint, and grave humanitarian criticism tied to Gaza war policy and aid restrictions.
Observable evidence shows a state that can legislate, audit, insure, educate, innovate, and mobilize at scale. The same record also shows a willingness, especially under prolonged conflict and coalition pressure, to tolerate severe rights asymmetries, strained accountability, and humanitarian costs that sit in tension with its own constitutional promises of dignity, equality, and public responsibility.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Israel retains real state capacity, constitutional language about dignity, and broad public-service systems. It lands in mixed-negative territory because these strengths are repeatedly offset by governance strain, unequal rights realities, and severe humanitarian criticism under conflict pressure.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Foundational state language invokes justice, peace, and Jewish historical identity, but public conduct does not consistently reflect a transcendent moral restraint.
Basic Laws, courts, and audit institutions show belief in normative order, even if that order is heavily contested in practice.
The public constitutional tradition references prophetic and covenantal ideals, but state decision-making is not consistently disciplined by them.
Public rhetoric occasionally invokes prophetic justice, but the institutional record offers limited consistent evidence of that model under pressure.
Elections, courts, and audits create accountability channels, but recent coalition and war pressures have exposed major limits.
Contribution to Others
The state provides substantial care for its citizens through health, insurance, and welfare institutions, though unevenly.
National insurance and welfare systems materially support vulnerable residents, but poverty and inequality remain persistent.
Public agencies offer extensive formal service channels, hotlines, and benefits infrastructure.
The record is severely constrained by prolonged occupation, detention practices, and rights asymmetry affecting Palestinians.
The welfare system includes foster, adoption, child protection, and at-risk youth services.
The state has strong immigrant absorption structures, but treatment of non-Jewish outsiders and Palestinians is much more restrictive.
Personal Discipline
At the institutional level this appears as disciplined moral self-limitation; evidence is partial and inconsistent.
Tax-funded social insurance, health, and welfare systems function as real compulsory care mechanisms.
Reliability
Constitutional commitments to dignity, equality, open government, and responsible wartime conduct are repeatedly undercut in practice.
Stability Under Pressure
The state has shown real continuity and service mobilization after severe shocks, including war and mass trauma.
The economy and state finances remain functional under stress, despite war-driven deficits and downgrades.
Conflict resilience is real, but under battlefield pressure the state has accepted severe humanitarian and reputational costs.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
The State of Israel is declared and its provisional governing organs are established
The Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel proclaimed independence and created the Temporary State Council and Temporary Government as the first legislature and executive of the new state.
→ Created the sovereign institutional framework from which all later Israeli state systems developed.
highBasic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty embeds a rights-centered constitutional commitment
The Knesset enacted Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty, stating that human rights in Israel are grounded in the value of the human being, the sanctity of life, and liberty.
→ Strengthened the rights vocabulary and judicial basis for challenging state action.
highIsrael joins the Open Government Partnership and formalizes transparency commitments
The government joined the Open Government Partnership and publicly committed itself to transparency, accountability, public participation, and technological innovation.
→ Created an official benchmark for evaluating whether government openness and accountability are genuinely practiced.
mediumJudicial overhaul plans trigger Israel's largest domestic institutional crisis in years
The government's push to curb judicial powers and tighten political control over appointments provoked mass protests, elite opposition, and a prolonged struggle over democratic checks and balances.
→ Revealed how vulnerable institutional trust could become when a governing coalition sought to rebalance power quickly and unilaterally.
highInternational legal and humanitarian pressure intensifies over Gaza aid access
As war in Gaza continued, the ICJ issued additional provisional measures and the U.N. and Reuters-documented international criticism focused on blocked aid, starvation risk, and Israel's responsibility to facilitate humanitarian access.
→ Sharply increased scrutiny of whether security policy was overriding basic humanitarian obligations.
highIsrael submits its first Biennial Transparency Report under the Paris framework
The Ministry of Environmental Protection published Israel's first Biennial Transparency Report and fourth National Communication, outlining climate policies, targets, adaptation work, and reporting improvements.
→ Showed that the state can still produce structured long-horizon policy reporting and internationally legible transparency outputs.
mediumThe State Comptroller says key SDG and financial-governance commitments remain largely declarative
The 2025 Annual Audit Report said Israel's SDG implementation mechanism was ineffective and described material deficiencies in fund governance, while wartime audits continued into preparedness and civilian support failures.
→ Confirmed that parts of the state's formal commitment architecture were weaker in implementation than in rhetoric.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Judicial overhaul crisis
2023The government advanced a judicial overhaul that triggered mass protests, elite institutional resistance, and a national debate about democratic checks and balances.
Response: The state did not collapse; courts, protests, and political bargaining all remained active, but the episode exposed serious stress on institutional trust.
governance_capacity_with_democratic_strainGaza humanitarian access pressure
2024As the Gaza war continued, Israel faced growing external pressure over aid access, civilian harm, and compliance with international obligations.
Response: Officials defended restrictions as security-related and denied obstructing aid, while international criticism and court scrutiny intensified.
security_first_resilience_with_severe_humanitarian_costWar oversight and civilian support audits
2025The State Comptroller opened broad wartime audits while also reviewing state preparedness and civilian support after October 7 and the Iron Swords war.
Response: The existence of formal audit pathways is a resilience strength, but the need for such sweeping review reflects major prior failure and governance stress.
institutional_self_review_after_major_failureProgression
crisis years
Long-running occupation, democratic polarization, the 2023 judicial crisis, and the Gaza war exposed a widening gap between state ideals and state conduct.
decliningcurrent stage
Israel remains powerful and institutionally capable, but its current moral trajectory is unstable because security imperatives keep colliding with accountability and equal-dignity claims.
unstableearly years
The state began with intense institution-building, immigration absorption, and the rapid creation of governing organs under existential pressure.
improvinggrowth years
Over decades Israel built strong courts, public insurance systems, research capacity, and globally significant technological and security infrastructure.
improvingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • The state has durable institutions that deliver elections, social insurance, health coverage, and public administration at national scale.
- • Public audits, courts, and open-government commitments create real accountability channels rather than pure opacity.
- • The state can mobilize resources quickly in crisis and sustain high-capacity science, technology, and security systems.
Concerns
- • Constitutional commitments to dignity and equality are repeatedly undercut by unequal rights realities for Palestinians and by emergency-first governance.
- • Those accountability channels have shown clear limits under coalition pressure, prolonged conflict, and wartime decision-making.
- • Under acute conflict pressure it has accepted humanitarian, legal, and reputational costs that sharply weaken its goodness alignment.
Evidence Quality
7
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable institutional behavior and public record. It does not judge hidden motives or private belief.