Select your language
Select your language
Select your language

Methodology

This monitoring tool is developed as part of the Civic Champions project, drawing on extensive research conducted in Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece, and Italy. Its purpose is to assess and track the state of civic space through the lens of legal, financial, operational, digital, and physical challenges facing Civil Society Organizations (CSOs).

The tool is structured around seven thematic areas, each corresponding to key risk dimensions identified through the project’s national and comparative research:

 Legal and regulatory restrictions

Administrative and bureaucratic barriers

 Funding access and banking challenges

Public perception and smear campaigns

 Online harassment and cybersecurity

Physical
threats

Attacks based on protected characteristics

Each indicator is carefully designed to reflect real conditions on the ground, especially for those working on sensitive or high-risk issues. This approach ensures that both local nuance and cross-country comparability are preserved.

Data collection and analysis

The questions and indicators used in this tool are grounded in the extensive qualitative research carried out during the Civic Champions project. This included:

In-depth interviews with civil society leaders and practitioners

Focus groups with diverse CSOs and grassroots actors

Development of country-specific reports and a Comparative Report that identified shared challenges and national differences

Data is collected directly from CSOs via a secure digital questionnaire, organized by thematic section. The form gathers:

Quantitative inputs (e.g., number of threats, delays, attacks)

Qualitative descriptions (e.g., context of smear campaigns or examples of legal pressures)

Self-assessment of confidence in the tool's reflection of reality

The information submitted contributes to:

Country-level dashboards

Trend analysis

Evidence-based reporting to national, EU, and international institutions

Scoring process

The scoring system transforms CSO responses into a clear picture of risk. It uses descriptive scales to assess the frequency and severity of challenges – from legal restrictions and funding barriers to online harassment and physical threats.

Responses are interpreted using a five-level risk scale:

5-Step Bar
very low low medium high very high

Minimal or no restrictions

5-Step Bar
very low low medium high very high

Occasional challenges or disruption​s

5-Step Bar
very low low medium high very high

Frequent or serious incident​s

5-Step Bar
very low low medium high very high

Severe or escalating threats

5-Step Bar
very low low medium high very high

Widespread, systemic, or irreversible risks

Incidents involving identity-based attacks or violence are given greater weight to reflect their seriousness.

This process, grounded in interviews and focus groups from the Civic Champions project, ensures that each CSO’s lived reality is accurately reflected and informs both individual support and system-level advocacy.