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Conflict Recurrence Analysis×Militarized Interstate Dispute Analysis×Anàlisi de supervivència×
CampInternational RelationsInternational RelationsEstadística per a la recerca
FamíliaSurvival analysisProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Any d'origen200419961958
Autor originalCivil-war recurrence literature (e.g., Barbara F. Walter)Daniel Jones, Stuart Bremer & J. David Singer (Correlates of War project)Edward L. Kaplan and Paul Meier
TipusSurvival/repeated-events analysis of renewed conflictCoding and statistical analysis of interstate militarized confrontationsMethod
Font seminalWalter, B. F. (2004). Does conflict beget conflict? Explaining recurring civil war. Journal of Peace Research, 41(3), 371–388. DOI ↗Jones, D. M., Bremer, S. A., & Singer, J. D. (1996). Militarized interstate disputes, 1816–1992: Rationale, coding rules, and empirical patterns. Conflict Management and Peace Science, 15(2), 163–213. DOI ↗Kaplan, E. L., & Meier, P. (1958). Nonparametric estimation from incomplete observations. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 53(282), 457–481. DOI ↗
ÀliesRecurring Civil War Analysis, Conflict Relapse Analysis, Repeated-Conflict Survival Analysis, Conflict Recidivism AnalysisMID Analysis, Militarized Dispute Coding, Correlates of War Dispute Analysis, Dyadic Conflict Onset AnalysisKaplan-Meier analysis, Cox regression, TTE analysis
Relacionats333
ResumConflict recurrence analysis studies why and when conflicts that have ended return, treating renewed war as a time-to-event outcome. Most civil wars in recent decades have occurred in countries with a prior war, making recurrence a central puzzle. Using survival and repeated-events models — as in Barbara Walter's (2004) analysis of recurring civil war — researchers model the hazard that a post-conflict country relapses into violence as a function of how the war ended and the underlying conditions, while accounting for the fact that the same country can experience multiple conflict spells.Militarized interstate dispute (MID) analysis is the coding and quantitative study of confrontations in which one state threatens, displays, or uses military force against another. Built on the Correlates of War project's MID dataset and the coding rules codified by Jones, Bremer, and Singer (1996), it provides the standard observational measure of interstate conflict short of and including war, structured as dyad-years so that the onset, escalation, and outcomes of disputes can be modeled statistically across two centuries of the international system.Survival analysis is a collection of statistical methods for modeling time from a defined starting point until an event of interest occurs (disease, recovery, death, equipment failure). Kaplan and Meier's nonparametric estimator (1958) and David Cox's proportional hazards model (1972) jointly enabled analysis of censored data—individuals whose event times are unknown because they left the study or were still event-free at follow-up. Indispensable in oncology, cardiology, infectious disease research, engineering reliability, and any field where time-to-event matters.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: Conflict Recurrence Analysis · Militarized Interstate Dispute Analysis · Survival Analysis. Recuperat el 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare