The majority of conflict event datasets rely on media reports as their sole source of information. Because of the various difficulties associated with media reports, it is useful to compare conflict events based on them with those obtained from other observers. A paper published in 2010 by O’Loughlin and colleagues makes a first attempt to do this by using (1) a media-based event dataset and (2) military records on Afghanistan. While the authors conclude that the level of agreement between the two datasets is high, my results show that this goes away once we aggregate to finer analytical resolutions – those that are typically used in micro-level conflict analyses. Thus, rather than giving us the ‘all-clear’ for the accuracy and quality of m...
Surveys provide crucial information about the social consequences of armed conflict, but armed confl...
We compare the treatment of Colombia in large cross-country conflict datasets with the information o...
We present a two-stage approach to civil conflict analysis. Unlike conventional approaches that focu...
The quantitative study of violent conflict and its mechanisms has in recent years greatly benefited ...
The quantitative study of violent conflict and its mechanisms has in recent years greatly benefited ...
Empirical researchers of civil war rarely collect data on violence themselves and instead rely on ot...
Researching conflict and peace has never been as driven by large-N data as it is now, nor has it eve...
Temporally and spatial disaggregated datasets are commonly used to study political violence. Researc...
How are representations of violence influenced by the ‘agency of data’, in other words the social pr...
This paper presents a guide to identifying and using the right conflict dataset. It is composed of t...
Machine-coded event datasets have become popular in conflict research. I argue that systematic media...
We highlight how efforts to collect systematic data on conflict have helped foster progress in peace...
We highlight how efforts to collect systematic data on conflict have helped foster progress in peace...
Surveys provide crucial information about the social consequences of armed conflict, but armed confl...
We compare the treatment of Colombia in large cross-country conflict datasets with the information o...
We present a two-stage approach to civil conflict analysis. Unlike conventional approaches that focu...
The quantitative study of violent conflict and its mechanisms has in recent years greatly benefited ...
The quantitative study of violent conflict and its mechanisms has in recent years greatly benefited ...
Empirical researchers of civil war rarely collect data on violence themselves and instead rely on ot...
Researching conflict and peace has never been as driven by large-N data as it is now, nor has it eve...
Temporally and spatial disaggregated datasets are commonly used to study political violence. Researc...
How are representations of violence influenced by the ‘agency of data’, in other words the social pr...
This paper presents a guide to identifying and using the right conflict dataset. It is composed of t...
Machine-coded event datasets have become popular in conflict research. I argue that systematic media...
We highlight how efforts to collect systematic data on conflict have helped foster progress in peace...
We highlight how efforts to collect systematic data on conflict have helped foster progress in peace...
Surveys provide crucial information about the social consequences of armed conflict, but armed confl...
We compare the treatment of Colombia in large cross-country conflict datasets with the information o...
We present a two-stage approach to civil conflict analysis. Unlike conventional approaches that focu...