Casualty counts are often controversial, and thorough research can only go so far in resolving such debates—there will almost always be missing data, and thus, a need to draw inferences about how comprehensively violence has been recorded. This article addresses that challenge by developing an estimation strategy based on the observation that violent events are generally distributed according to power laws, a pattern that structures expectations about what event data on armed conflict would look like if those data were complete. This technique is applied to estimate the number of Native American and US casualties in the American IndianWars between 1776 and 1890, demonstrating how scholars can use power laws to estimate conflict size, even (...
The economics literature typically uses counts of casualties as a measure of conflict intensity desp...
Rich measures of micro-level violent conflict intensity are key for successfully providing insight i...
Large-N studies of civil war overwhelmingly consider the state-specific structural conditions that m...
Casualty counts are often controversial, and thorough research can only go so far in resolving such ...
Power-law relationships, relating events with magnitudes to their frequency, are common in natural d...
This paper analyses the statistical distribution of war size. We find strong support for a Pareto-ty...
Countries have better abilities and stronger incentives to engage in militarized conflicts the large...
Abstract War is an extreme form of collective human behaviour characterized by coordinated violence....
This study introduces a theoretical model of how insurgency develops as a function of reactive mobil...
This paper analyses the statistical distribution of war sizes. Using the method recently proposed by...
Quantitative social science relies centrally on the ideal that any concept can be operationalized an...
It is still unknown whether there is some deep structure to modern wars and terrorist campaigns that...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.This p...
Since the cold war, there has been an increase in the rate of civil wars and a dramatic drop in inte...
Objective: To examine the possibility of estimating the number of civilian casualties in modern arme...
The economics literature typically uses counts of casualties as a measure of conflict intensity desp...
Rich measures of micro-level violent conflict intensity are key for successfully providing insight i...
Large-N studies of civil war overwhelmingly consider the state-specific structural conditions that m...
Casualty counts are often controversial, and thorough research can only go so far in resolving such ...
Power-law relationships, relating events with magnitudes to their frequency, are common in natural d...
This paper analyses the statistical distribution of war size. We find strong support for a Pareto-ty...
Countries have better abilities and stronger incentives to engage in militarized conflicts the large...
Abstract War is an extreme form of collective human behaviour characterized by coordinated violence....
This study introduces a theoretical model of how insurgency develops as a function of reactive mobil...
This paper analyses the statistical distribution of war sizes. Using the method recently proposed by...
Quantitative social science relies centrally on the ideal that any concept can be operationalized an...
It is still unknown whether there is some deep structure to modern wars and terrorist campaigns that...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.This p...
Since the cold war, there has been an increase in the rate of civil wars and a dramatic drop in inte...
Objective: To examine the possibility of estimating the number of civilian casualties in modern arme...
The economics literature typically uses counts of casualties as a measure of conflict intensity desp...
Rich measures of micro-level violent conflict intensity are key for successfully providing insight i...
Large-N studies of civil war overwhelmingly consider the state-specific structural conditions that m...