What This Report Is
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) published its first Annual Report in 1999. USCIRF is a government body created by Congress to monitor religious freedom around the world. This report covers conditions in seven countries and recommends U.S. policy responses.
What We Looked At
How a study is done determines whether you can trust what it found. The Citation Integrity Dashboard (CID) evaluates methodology (how the research was done), not conclusions (what the research found). We classified this report as a Policy Report. That means it pulls together existing information to guide government policy. It does not collect new data through surveys or fieldwork. Because of that classification, two of our eight scoring dimensions (which measure different parts of research quality) do not apply. We scored the remaining six.
What We Found
You cannot check the Commission’s work. The dimension called Verification Standards (which measures whether an outside observer can confirm the report’s claims) scored 2 out of 10. The report is 27,249 words long. It contains one web link. One. An independent reader who wanted to trace how the Commission reached its country-level conclusions would hit a dead end almost immediately. No documented process exists to access the underlying data, testimony transcripts, or country assessments. The Commission asks its audience to take its word for it.
The report barely cites anyone outside its own government. The dimension called Source Independence (which measures whether a report’s evidence comes from outside its own network) scored 3 out of 10. The citation analysis found that “Congress” appears 61 times. Human Rights Watch and Freedom House each appear once. Zero academic sources. Zero media sources. The evidence trail runs from USCIRF to Congress and back again. That is a closed loop, not independent verification. We scored this a 3 rather than lower because government reports draw on diplomatic cables and State Department channels that do not always produce URL citations. The independence problem is real, but partly reflects how government reporting works.
The report does not engage with disagreement. The dimension called Counter-Evidence (which measures whether a report addresses criticism or competing views) scored 2 out of 10. The report contains no section discussing alternative assessments. It does not acknowledge host government perspectives beyond dismissal. It has no corrections policy (a public process for fixing errors). As the Commission’s first report, it had no prior work to revise. But this dimension also asks whether the report reckons with evidence that cuts against its conclusions. It does not.
The scope is narrower than the title suggests. The dimension called Coverage Symmetry (which measures whether a report’s actual coverage matches what it claims to cover) scored 5 out of 10. USCIRF has a global mandate from Congress. The title says “Annual Report.” The report covers seven countries. That is a gap between what the title implies and what the report delivers. The executive summary does not flag this gap. The report also shows a directional pattern: “Muslim” appears as a target of persecution 23 times and as an agent zero times. That may reflect real conditions in the countries selected. But the report never explains why it chose these countries over others.
The Bottom Line
The USCIRF 1999 Annual Report scored 3.5 out of 10. That places it in the Advocacy-Grade band (scores between 2.0 and 3.9), which means it functions more like an advocacy product than independent research. We did not apply a non-compensatory cap (an automatic score limit triggered by failure on a single critical dimension). The score held steady across three different ways of weighting the dimensions, which means it is not a quirk of how we assigned importance to each category. This score reflects methodology only. The Commission’s conclusions about religious freedom conditions may be entirely correct. Its methods simply do not give an outside observer the tools to confirm that.