The problem of the missing dead

Author:

Dawkins Sophia1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Political Science, Yale University

Abstract

This article examines what scholars can learn about civilian killings from newswire data in situations of non-random missingness. It contributes to this understanding by offering a unique view of the data-generation process in the South Sudanese civil war. Drawing on 40 hours of interviews with 32 human rights advocates, humanitarian workers, and journalists who produce ACLED and UCDP-GED’s source data, the article illustrates how non-random missingness leads to biases of inconsistent magnitude and direction. The article finds that newswire data for contexts like South Sudan suffer from a self-fulfilling narrative bias, where journalists select stories and human rights investigators target incidents that conform to international views of what a conflict is about. This is compounded by the way agencies allocate resources to monitor specific locations and types of violence to fit strategic priorities. These biases have two implications: first, in the most volatile conflicts, point estimates about violence using newswire data may be impossible, and most claims of precision may be false; secondly, body counts reveal little if divorced from circumstance. The article presents a challenge to political methodologists by asking whether social scientists can build better cross-national fatality measures given the biases inherent in the data-generation process.

Funder

United States Institute of Peace

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Safety Research,Sociology and Political Science

Reference50 articles.

1. Arjona Ana, Castilla Juan Pablo (2020) The violent bias in the study of civil war. Working paper, presented at Yale University, 27 February.

2. The Politics of Civilian Casualty Counts

3. Solving the Problem of Unattributed Political Violence

4. This Mine is Mine! How Minerals Fuel Conflicts in Africa

5. Estimating the number of civilian deaths from armed conflicts

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