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ACLED Event Analysis×Event Data Analysis of Conflict×
ÁreaInternational RelationsInternational Relations
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem20101994
Autor originalClionadh Raleigh, Andrew Linke, Håvard Hegre & Joakim KarlsenPhilip Schrodt (KEDS/TABARI); ICEWS team (Boschee et al.)
TipoDisaggregated coding and analysis of political-violence eventsAutomated extraction of structured political events from news text
Fonte seminalRaleigh, C., Linke, A., Hegre, H., & Karlsen, J. (2010). Introducing ACLED: An armed conflict location and event dataset. Journal of Peace Research, 47(5), 651–660. DOI ↗Schrodt, 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 ↗
Outros nomesACLED Analysis, Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, Political Violence Event Analysis, Disaggregated Conflict Event AnalysisPolitical Event Data, Machine-Coded Conflict Event Data, Conflict Event Extraction, Who-Did-What-to-Whom Event Coding
Relacionados34
ResumoACLED event analysis is the disaggregated study of political violence and protest using the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project, introduced by Raleigh, Linke, Hegre, and Karlsen (2010). ACLED codes individual events — battles, violence against civilians, riots, protests, explosions and remote violence, and strategic developments — with their date, location, actors, and any fatalities, updated on a near-weekly basis. Its fine granularity and timeliness make it a workhorse for mapping, monitoring, and modeling where, when, and by whom political violence occurs.Event 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.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: ACLED Event Analysis · Event Data Analysis of Conflict. Recuperado em 2026-06-24 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare