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Event Data Analysis of Conflict×Content Analysis of Treaties×
CampInternational RelationsInternational Relations
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Any d'origen19942000
Autor originalPhilip Schrodt (KEDS/TABARI); ICEWS team (Boschee et al.)Klaus Krippendorff (content analysis methodology); legalization literature (Abbott et al.)
TipusAutomated extraction of structured political events from news textSystematic coding of the text and design features of international agreements
Font seminalSchrodt, P. A., Davis, S. G., & Weddle, J. L. (1994). Political science: KEDS — A program for the machine coding of event data. Social Science Computer Review, 12(4), 561–588. See also Gerner, Schrodt et al. (1994), Machine coding of event data using regional and international sources, International Studies Quarterly, 38(1), 91–119. DOI ↗Hayes, A. F., & Krippendorff, K. (2007). Answering the call for a standard reliability measure for coding data. Communication Methods and Measures, 1(1), 77–89. DOI ↗
ÀliesPolitical Event Data, Machine-Coded Conflict Event Data, Conflict Event Extraction, Who-Did-What-to-Whom Event CodingTreaty Text Analysis, International Agreement Coding, Treaty Design Content Analysis, Legalization Content Analysis
Relacionats43
ResumEvent data analysis is the automated extraction of structured records of political interactions — who did what to whom, when, and where — from large volumes of news text, for the quantitative study of conflict and cooperation. Pioneered for machine coding by Philip Schrodt with the KEDS and TABARI systems and scaled in projects such as ICEWS and GDELT, it turns unstructured reporting into dated actor-action-target triples coded to an ontology like CAMEO, which can then be aggregated into time series of interstate or intrastate hostility.Content analysis of treaties is the systematic, rule-governed coding of the text and design features of international agreements — their obligations, precision, delegation, enforcement, flexibility, and substantive provisions — to study how treaties are written and what explains variation in their design. It applies the established content-analysis methodology codified by Krippendorff to the specialized vocabulary of international law and institutions, often organized around frameworks such as the legalization concept of Abbott and colleagues (2000).
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: Event Data Analysis of Conflict · Content Analysis of Treaties. Recuperat el 2026-06-24 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare