Estimating conflict losses and reporting biases

Author:

Radford Benjamin J.12ORCID,Dai Yaoyao3ORCID,Stoehr Niklas4,Schein Aaron5,Fernandez Mya23,Sajid Hanif1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Public Policy Program, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223

2. Intelligence Community Center of Academic Excellence, Department of Political Science & Public Administration, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223

3. Department of Political Science & Public Administration, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223

4. Department of Computer Science, ETH Zürich, Zürich 8092, Switzerland

5. Department of Statistics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637

Abstract

Determining the number of casualties and fatalities suffered in militarized conflicts is important for conflict measurement, forecasting, and accountability. However, given the nature of conflict, reliable statistics on casualties are rare. Countries or political actors involved in conflicts have incentives to hide or manipulate these numbers, while third parties might not have access to reliable information. For example, in the ongoing militarized conflict between Russia and Ukraine, estimates of the magnitude of losses vary wildly, sometimes across orders of magnitude. In this paper, we offer an approach for measuring casualties and fatalities given multiple reporting sources and, at the same time, accounting for the biases of those sources. We construct a dataset of 4,609 reports of military and civilian losses by both sides. We then develop a statistical model to better estimate losses for both sides given these reports. Our model accounts for different kinds of reporting biases, structural correlations between loss types, and integrates loss reports at different temporal scales. Our daily and cumulative estimates provide evidence that Russia has lost more personnel than has Ukraine and also likely suffers from a higher fatality to casualty ratio. We find that both sides likely overestimate the personnel losses suffered by their opponent and that Russian sources underestimate their own losses of personnel.

Funder

UNC | University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference14 articles.

1. Russia calls up 300 000 reservists says 6 000 soldiers killed in Ukraine. Reuters (2022).

2. Ministry of Defense of Ukraine The total combat losses of the enemy from 24.02 to 22.09. Ministry of Defense of Ukraine Official Website (2022).

3. N. Sambanis What is civil war? Conceptual and empirical complexities of an operational definition. J. Confl. Res. 48 814–858 (2004).

4. Explaining the Severity of Civil Wars

5. Lessons from an escalation prediction competition

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