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Updated August 13, 2024
Global Human Rights: International Religious Freedom Policy

For decades, U.S. policymakers have sought to promote
religious freedom abroad, reflective both of a general
interest in promoting human rights through U.S. foreign
policy, as well as the emphasis on religious freedom in U.S.
domestic law and political culture. Protection of religious
freedom is also affirmed in international law through the
United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and
other instruments. Congress has sought to ensure continued
support for religious freedom as a focus of U.S. relations
with other nations, most prominently through passage of the
International Religious Freedom Act of 1998.
Legslative Background
The International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 (IRFA;
P.L. 105-292; 22 U.S.C. 6401 et seq.) is the foundational
legislation for U.S. international religious freedom (IRF)
policy. Recognizing religious freedom as a universal
human right, IRFA created various government
mechanisms aimed at cementing IRF as a foreign policy
priority of the United States. Most significantly, the law
* created an Office of International Religious Freedom
within the State Department headed by an Ambassador
at Large (AAL) for IRF;
* required that the Secretary of State issue an annual
report on the status of religious freedom around the
world;
* mandated that the President identify countries of
particular concern and prescribed U.S. government
actions in response to violations of religious freedom,
subject to presidential waiver authority; and
* created the independent U.S. Commission on
International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).
Congress has subsequently strengthened IRFA through
amendment and the enactment of related provisions,
notably through the Frank R. Wolf International Religious
Freedom Act (Wolf IRFA; P.L. 114-281), which became
law in December 2016.
The State epartment's Ro e
The State Department leads the federal government's
efforts to promote international religious freedom. The
AAL for IRF heads the State Department's Office of
International Religious Freedom (IRF Office). Per IRFA, as
amended, the AAL integrates IRF policies into U.S. foreign
policy efforts and is to participate in any interagency
processes in which the promotion of IRF can advance
United States national security interests. The AAL and the
IRF Office lead the drafting of the IRFA-mandated annual
international religious freedom report (IRF report) and
advise the Secretary of State on U.S. policy actions in
response to religious freedom violations. The position is
currently held by Rashad Hussain, whom the Senate
confirmed in December 2021 following nomination by

President Biden. A related senior position is the
congressionally mandated Special Envoy for Monitoring
and Combating anti-Semitism (currently held by Deborah
Lipstadt), which was upgraded to a presidentially appointed
position with the rank of ambassador by P.L. 116-326,
enacted in January 2021.
In the FY2024 Department of State, Foreign Operations,
and Related Programs Appropriations Act (SFOPS;
Division F of P.L. 118-47) and accompanying explanatory
statement, Congress directed approximately $10 million to
fund the IRF Office and $30 million for IRF foreign
assistance programs, among other IRF-related directives.
International Religous Freedom
Report
The IRF report, which is statutorily required by May 1 each
year, covers developments in individual foreign countries
during the prior calendar year and includes information on
the status of religious freedom, violations of religious
freedom, and relevant U.S. policies. The IRF report is the
official U.S. government account of religious freedom
conditions abroad, and is a primary information source for
the executive branch's country of particular concern
designations. The report covering calendar year 2023 was
submitted to Congress on June 26, 2024, and is available on
the Department of State website.
Countries (and Entites) of Part cu ar
Concern
IRFA mandates that the President (subsequently delegated
to the Secretary of State), using information from the IRF
report and other sources, annually designate as countries
of particular concern (CPCs) those countries the
governments of which have engaged in or tolerated
particularly severe religious freedom violations (see
Figure 1). The law defines particularly severe violations of
religious freedom as systematic, ongoing, and egregious
violations, including violations such as torture; cruel,
inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment; prolonged
detention without charges; forced disappearances; or other
flagrant denial of the right to life, liberty, or the security of
persons.
Wolf IRFA mandated an additional special watch list of
countries with severe religious freedom violations but that
do not reach the threshold of systematic, ongoing, and
egregious. In recognition of religious freedom abuses
carried out by the Islamic State and other non-state actors,
Wolf IRFA also added a new requirement that the President
designate entities of particular concern (EPCs) and, when
practicable, take actions to address severe violations of
religious freedom committed by EPCs.

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