Replication data for The Waning of War is Real. A number of recent studies argue that there is decline in armed conflict within and between nations. Gohdes and Price run against the grain in arguing that there is no evidence for a decrease in battle deaths in armed conflicts after World War II and that the trend reported in our earlier articles is spurious. However, they do not plausibly justify this thesis. We reexamine the argument for a decline, exploring nonlinearities in the data and potential biases due to measurement error. We find that very strong assumptions must hold in order for measurement errors to explain the trend in battle deaths
About the book by Azar Gat "The Causes of War and the Spread of Peace: But Will War Rebound?", Oxfor...
The ‘‘proximate casualties’ ’ hypothesis holds that popular support for American wars is undermined ...
Many contend that President Bush's reelection and increased vote share in 2004 prove that the Iraq W...
A number of recent studies argue that there is decline in armed conflict within and between nations....
A recent article using the new Correlates of War (COW) data on the distribution of interstate, intra...
We provide strong evidence of a post-1950 decline in conventional war. A survey of the qualitative l...
For the past 70 years, there has been a downward trend in the size of wars, but the idea of an endur...
We address weaknesses in the Peace Research Insitute Oslo (PRIO) Battle Deaths Dataset, and as a res...
War heightens public interest in politics, especially when human lives are lost. We examine whether...
We address weaknesses in the Peace Research Insitute Oslo (PRIO) Battle Deaths Dataset, and as a res...
We propose a methodology to look at violence in particular, and other aspects ofquantitative histori...
Harrison and Wolf claim that interstate ?wars are becoming more frequent?. This is an alarming claim...
Since the Vietnam War, U.S. policymakers have worried that the American public will support military...
It is widely believed that the human impact of civil conflict in the present era is especially destr...
Large-n studies of conflict have produced a large number of statistically significant results but li...
About the book by Azar Gat "The Causes of War and the Spread of Peace: But Will War Rebound?", Oxfor...
The ‘‘proximate casualties’ ’ hypothesis holds that popular support for American wars is undermined ...
Many contend that President Bush's reelection and increased vote share in 2004 prove that the Iraq W...
A number of recent studies argue that there is decline in armed conflict within and between nations....
A recent article using the new Correlates of War (COW) data on the distribution of interstate, intra...
We provide strong evidence of a post-1950 decline in conventional war. A survey of the qualitative l...
For the past 70 years, there has been a downward trend in the size of wars, but the idea of an endur...
We address weaknesses in the Peace Research Insitute Oslo (PRIO) Battle Deaths Dataset, and as a res...
War heightens public interest in politics, especially when human lives are lost. We examine whether...
We address weaknesses in the Peace Research Insitute Oslo (PRIO) Battle Deaths Dataset, and as a res...
We propose a methodology to look at violence in particular, and other aspects ofquantitative histori...
Harrison and Wolf claim that interstate ?wars are becoming more frequent?. This is an alarming claim...
Since the Vietnam War, U.S. policymakers have worried that the American public will support military...
It is widely believed that the human impact of civil conflict in the present era is especially destr...
Large-n studies of conflict have produced a large number of statistically significant results but li...
About the book by Azar Gat "The Causes of War and the Spread of Peace: But Will War Rebound?", Oxfor...
The ‘‘proximate casualties’ ’ hypothesis holds that popular support for American wars is undermined ...
Many contend that President Bush's reelection and increased vote share in 2004 prove that the Iraq W...