Color poster with text, images, and maps.This project builds on prior disaggregated studies of civil conflict by discussing the utility of news media as a source for coded conflict data, with Liberia serving as a case study. The Armed Conflict Location Event Data (ACLED), made available by the International Peace Research Institute Oslo and the Center for the Study of Civil War, breaks civil war into individual conflict events at the local level. This offers an exciting opportunity for small scale analysis of rebel movement. However, there is a striking tendency for events to occur near roads, which raises questions about a possible roadside bias in news coverage of war, as news accounts are the primary source of event data. By characteriz...
Armed non-state conflict without the direct involvement of the state government is a common phenomen...
This paper constructs a new monthly time-varying data set for the civil war violence in Uganda durin...
African conflicts are highly represented in cross-national conflict event datasets, and their causes...
Subnational conflict research increasingly utilizes georeferenced event datasets to understand conte...
This research has been supported by grants from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-...
This article presents ACLED, an Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset. ACLED codes the actions o...
Empirical researchers of civil war rarely collect data on violence themselves and instead rely on ot...
This article presents ACLED, an Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset. ACLED codes the actions o...
This data article provides a descriptive overview of the Cities and Armed Conflict Events (CACE) dat...
The bulk of work on civil conflict seeks to explain variation across civil wars rather than within t...
The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022343317702956The dat...
Terrain is central to understanding why some countries experience contentious ethnic divisions and c...
Scholarship on civil war is overwhelmingly preoccupied with armed activity. Data collection efforts ...
Temporally and spatial disaggregated datasets are commonly used to study political violence. Researc...
This data-note introduces the Sierra Leone Local – Location Event Dataset (SLL-LED) – an event datas...
Armed non-state conflict without the direct involvement of the state government is a common phenomen...
This paper constructs a new monthly time-varying data set for the civil war violence in Uganda durin...
African conflicts are highly represented in cross-national conflict event datasets, and their causes...
Subnational conflict research increasingly utilizes georeferenced event datasets to understand conte...
This research has been supported by grants from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-...
This article presents ACLED, an Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset. ACLED codes the actions o...
Empirical researchers of civil war rarely collect data on violence themselves and instead rely on ot...
This article presents ACLED, an Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset. ACLED codes the actions o...
This data article provides a descriptive overview of the Cities and Armed Conflict Events (CACE) dat...
The bulk of work on civil conflict seeks to explain variation across civil wars rather than within t...
The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022343317702956The dat...
Terrain is central to understanding why some countries experience contentious ethnic divisions and c...
Scholarship on civil war is overwhelmingly preoccupied with armed activity. Data collection efforts ...
Temporally and spatial disaggregated datasets are commonly used to study political violence. Researc...
This data-note introduces the Sierra Leone Local – Location Event Dataset (SLL-LED) – an event datas...
Armed non-state conflict without the direct involvement of the state government is a common phenomen...
This paper constructs a new monthly time-varying data set for the civil war violence in Uganda durin...
African conflicts are highly represented in cross-national conflict event datasets, and their causes...