Joshua BrinksISciences, LLC 
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Summary:

  • Depicts spatially explicit and disaggregated point locations for battle activities.
  • Includes non-violent battle events (troop movements, diplomacy, etc.).
  • Violent and non-violent events are not separated.
  • Loose or non-existent actor definitions.

The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED)1 is one of a number of recently developed high disaggregated armed conflict datasets. Similar to The Uppsala Conflict Data Program Georeferenced Event Dataset (UCDP-GED v18.1),2 The Social Conflict Analysis in Africa Database (SCAD),3 and the Militarized Interstate Dispute Locations (MIDL v4.3)4 datasets, ACLED presents dyadic conflict data with a high level of spatial accuracy. Although these datasets were initially released with restricted geographic scope (with the exception of MIDL), they all expanded their spatial reach significantly over the past 5-10 years. ACLED now encompasses Africa, South Asia, South East Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and Latin America, UCDP-GED is currently advertised as a global dataset of armed conflict, and SCAD has expanded to include Africa, Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean.

These datasets are similar in nature, but can vary greatly in their reporting criteria and supplementary information. Eck (2012)5 recently reviewed the fundamental differences between UCDP-GED and ACLED. UCDP-GED provides superior data for violence and fatalities, but ACLED distinguishes itself by being the only source for non-violent conflict related events like troop movements and governmental aid. Furthermore, in contrast to UCDP-GED, ACLED uses less restrictive definitions of “events” and “actors” involved in an event. The effect of non-violent event coding and looser actor definitions is a larger database, however, it may be less suitable for statistical inference and analysis without substantial pre-processing. Spatially disaggregated conflict data presents additional challenges. Larger conflicts between the same actors often result in several battle events that are recorded as individual observations. Although UCDP-GED provides several metadata fields and additional datasets to better characterize the complexities of inter and international conflict, ACLED provides limited metadata and no additional datasets.

Reference

1.
Raleigh, C., Linke, A., Hegre, H. & Karlsen, J. Introducing ACLED: An Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset: Special Data Feature. Journal of Peace Research 47, 651–660 (2010).
2.
Sundberg, R. & Melander, E. Introducing the UCDP Georeferenced Event Dataset. Journal of Peace Research 50, 523–532 (2013).
3.
Salehyan, I. et al. Social Conflict in Africa: A New Database. International Interactions 38, 503–511 (2012).
4.
Maoz, Z., Johnson, P. L., Kaplan, J., Ogunkoya, F. & Shreve, A. P. The Dyadic Militarized Interstate Disputes ( MIDs) Dataset Version 3.0: Logic, Characteristics, and Comparisons to Alternative Datasets. Journal of Conflict Resolution 0022002718784158 (2018) doi: 10.1177/0022002718784158.
5.
Eck, K. In data we trust? A comparison of UCDP GED and ACLED conflict events datasets. Cooperation and Conflict 47, 124–141 (2012).

Citation Information:

  • Title: The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED)
  • Publication Date: 2019
  • Data Form: spatial points, tabular, dyadic
  • Publisher: The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project
  • Online Host: https://www.acleddata.com/data/
  • DANTE Citekey: ClionadhRaleigh2010

Dataset Contact Information:

Clionadh Raleigh, Department of Geography, Trinity College Dublin, CSCW, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) 
Andrew Linke, Department of Geography, University of Colorado 
Håvard Hegre, Department of Political Science, University of Oslo, CSCW, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) 
Joakim Karlsen, Østfold University College, CSCW, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) 

Use Constraints:

Non commercial use permitted. For all other use see the ACLED Terms of Use and Attribution Policy.

Abstract:

This article presents ACLED, an Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset. ACLED codes the actions of rebels, governments, and militias within unstable states, specifying the exact location and date of battle events, transfers of military control, headquarter establishment, civilian violence, and rioting. In the current version, the dataset covers 50 unstable countries from 1997 through 2010. ACLED’s disaggregation of civil war and transnational violent events allow for research on local level factors and the dynamics of civil and communal conflict. Findings from subnational conflict research challenges conclusions from larger national-level studies. In a brief descriptive analysis, the authors find that, on average, conflict covers 15% of a state’s territory, but almost half of a state can be directly affected by internal wars.

Additional Metadata

Spatial Information:

Spatial Reference Information:

  • Coordinate System: Latitude / Longitude
  • Resolution:
  • Units: decimal degrees
  • Geodetic Model: WGS1984

Time Period Information:

  • Beginning Date: 1997
  • Ending Date: 2020
  • Resolution: daily

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