41 to 50 of 57 Results
Jan 20, 2009 -
Replication data for: Standing Your Ground: Territorial Disputes and International Conflict
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 1015.9 KB -
MD5: d0ea36ba1c299a132cf11d119838c3f1
Data file for this study in original Excel format |
Jan 20, 2009 -
Replication data for: Standing Your Ground: Territorial Disputes and International Conflict
MS Word - 21.5 KB -
MD5: 30f373496aa5ebb46a95ba5cdcd30881
Codebook for this study |
Jan 20, 2009
Paul Huth; Benjamin Valentino; and Sarah Croco, 2009, "Replication data for: Covenants Without the Sword: International Law and the Protection of Civilians in Times of War", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/JGE9OF, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:9Z4q6JNmAhoUZWhuZmdHIg== [fileUNF]
Do the international laws of war effectively protect civilian populations from deliberate attack? In a statistical analysis of all interstate wars from 1900 to 2003 the authors find no evidence that signatories of The Hague or Geneva Conventions intentionally kill fewer civilians during war than do non-signatories. This result holds for democratic... |
Jan 20, 2009 -
Replication data for: Covenants Without the Sword: International Law and the Protection of Civilians in Times of War
Tabular Data - 15.5 KB - 21 Variables, 148 Observations - UNF:3:9Z4q6JNmAhoUZWhuZmdHIg==
Replication dataset for "Covenants Without the Sword: International Law and the Protection of Civilians in Times of War" World Politics v.58.3
By Benjamin Valentino, Paul Huth and Sarah Croco.
Please direct any questions regarding this do file to Sarah Croco (croco@umich.edu).
|
Jan 20, 2009 -
Replication data for: Covenants Without the Sword: International Law and the Protection of Civilians in Times of War
Plain Text - 1.2 KB -
MD5: a19883c02478331e2cc2272cead5ca76
This do file replicates Tables 1 and 3 from "Covenants Without the Sword: International Law and the Protection of Civilians in Times of War" World Politics v.58.3
By Benjamin Valentino, Paul Huth and Sarah Croco.
Please direct any questions regarding this do file to Sarah Croco (croco@umich.edu).
|
Jan 20, 2009
Paul Huth; Chris Gelpi; Scott Bennett, 2009, "Replication data for: System Uncertainty, Risk Propensity, and International Conflict Among the Great Powers", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/VNAHT6, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:spPQsRP9xcmBAey6zbv58w== [fileUNF]
The authors investigate the relationship between system structure and the initiation of militarized disputes among Great Powers. The central hypotheses concern the interaction between system uncertainty and the risk propensity of national decision makers. The authors employ a research design that enables them to incorporate explanatory variables fr... |
Jan 20, 2009 -
Replication data for: System Uncertainty, Risk Propensity, and International Conflict Among the Great Powers
Tabular Data - 907.6 KB - 222 Variables, 479 Observations - UNF:3:spPQsRP9xcmBAey6zbv58w==
Data file for this study |
Jan 20, 2009 -
Replication data for: System Uncertainty, Risk Propensity, and International Conflict Among the Great Powers
ZIP Archive - 352.3 KB -
MD5: 46aece2533825a1a5a72c08fdb4e3449
Zip file containing data for this study in original file format |
Jan 20, 2009
Paul Huth; Benjamin Valentino; Dylan Balch-Lindsay, 2009, "Replication data for: Draining The Sea: Mass Killing and Guerrilla Warfare", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/LMBBHI, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:gWci8KOrpe54f8qJHXAogw== [fileUNF]
Why do some armed conflicts result in the intentional killing of large numbers of civilians? In this article we examine the incidence of mass killing in all large-scale armed conflicts from 1945-2000. We find that mass killing during armed conflicts is often a calculated military strategy used by regimes attempting to defeat major guerrilla insurge... |
Tabular Data - 12.8 KB - 18 Variables, 165 Observations - UNF:3:gWci8KOrpe54f8qJHXAogw==
Data file for this study |