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Provocation by Design?: Holy Places, Public Transport, and Civil Conflict Escalation
Uppsala University, Disciplinary Domain of Humanities and Social Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Peace and Conflict Research. Peace Research Institute, Oslo.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-5372-7129
Uppsala University, Disciplinary Domain of Humanities and Social Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Government.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-0650-2127
(English)Manuscript (preprint) (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

What explains conflict escalation during civil war? This article explores whether provocative attacks on religious sites and public transport constitute a precursor to a surge of violence. One argument pertains that the symbolic and doctrinal importance of places of worship means that attacks on these will affect individuals and the community emotionally and thereby increase the risk of escalation. However, it can also be suggested that the everyday societal importance of a public space is similar for religious sites and public transport hubs. We test these arguments using novel new global event data on these forms of selective targeting for 1989-2015, and find that the risk of conflict escalation increase in the aftermath of either attacks on places of worship or public transport, suggesting that community behavior is more affected to disruptions of societal everyday life than to the importance of symbols.

National Category
Political Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalisation Studies) Peace and Conflict Studies Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Research subject
Political Science; Peace and Conflict Research; Peace and Conflict Research; Administrative Law; Peace and Conflict Research
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-544707OAI: oai:DiVA.org:uu-544707DiVA, id: diva2:1919200
Part of project
Societies at risk: The impact of armed conflict on human development, Riksbankens JubileumsfondAvailable from: 2024-12-07 Created: 2024-12-07 Last updated: 2025-02-20
In thesis
1. Forecasting battles: New machine learning methods for predicting armed conflict
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Forecasting battles: New machine learning methods for predicting armed conflict
2025 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Over the past decade, the field of conflict forecasting has undergone a remarkable metamorphosis, transforming from a series of isolated efforts with low predictive power into large, globe-spanning projects with impressive performance. However, despite this evolution, many challenges still remain. First, while we are good at predicting absolute risks, we are poor at predicting conflict dynamics (onsets, escalations, de-escalations and terminations). Second, we are over-reliant on spatio-temporal features and mechanistic models due to the nature of the event-data we use, thus excluding actor agency. Third, we do not handle either data or model uncertainty. Fourth, we are lagging behind the state-of-the-art in machine-learning. This dissertation attempts to resolve some of these salient difficulties, by contributing to six core elements of current-generation forecasting systems. First, time, by looking at the substantive effects and uncertainties of the temporal distance between data and forecast horizons. Second, space, by looking at the inherent uncertainties of high-resolution geospatial data and proposing a statistical method to address this. Third, feature space, by tackling the extreme feature sparsity in event-data and proposing a novel, deep active learning approach to mine features from existing large conflict-related text corpora. Fourth, substantive knowledge, by combining findings from the previous papers to take a fresh look at the microdynamics of conflict escalation. Fifth, the forecasting process itself, by building models that directly forecast from text, eliminating the intermediate step of manual data curation. Finally, the frontier of event-data, by looking at whether the news-media heavy way we collect violent fatal events can be extended to the collection of non-violent events. Methodologically, the dissertation introduces state-of-the art methods to the field, including the use of large language models, Gaussian processes, active learning and deep time series modelling. The six papers in the dissertation exhibit significant performance improvement, especially in forecasting dynamics.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Uppsala: Uppsala University, 2025. p. 62
Series
Report / Department of Peace and Conflict Research, ISSN 0566-8808 ; 132
Keywords
conflict forecasting, predictive methodology, event data, battle events, spatial forecasting, machine learning, large language models, computational linguistics, civil war, armed conflict
National Category
Political Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalisation Studies) Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified Peace and Conflict Studies Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified Computer Sciences Social and Economic Geography
Research subject
Peace and Conflict Research; Computational Linguistics; Political Science; Social and Economic Geography; Machine learning
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-545176 (URN)978-91-506-3086-2 (ISBN)
Public defence
2025-03-21, Brusewitzsalen, Gamla Torget 6, Uppsala, 13:15 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2025-01-27 Created: 2024-12-12 Last updated: 2025-02-20

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Croicu, MihaiKreutz, Joakim

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