Publication | Closed Access
The Promise and Pitfalls of Conflict Prediction: Evidence from Colombia and Indonesia
35
Citations
33
References
2019
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringComputational EpidemiologyInternational ConflictPanel DataSocial SciencesGeopolitical ConflictComputational Social ScienceData ScienceViolenceLocal ConflictGeopoliticsPrediction ModellingCivil ConflictPublic PolicyCrime ForecastingViolent CrimeInternational RelationsPredictive AnalyticsConflict PredictionHigh-violence Hot Spots.violenceComparative PoliticsForecastingPolitical ConflictConflict StudyEpidemic IntelligencePolitical Science
Policymakers can take actions to prevent local conflict before it begins, if such violence can be accurately predicted.We examine the two countries with the richest available sub-national data: Colombia and Indonesia.We assemble two decades of fine-grained violence data by type, alongside hundreds of annual risk factors.We predict violence one year ahead with a range of machine learning techniques.Models reliably identify persistent, high-violence hot spots.Violence is not simply autoregressive, as detailed histories of disaggregated violence perform best.Rich socio-economic data also substitute well for these histories.Even with such unusually rich data, however, the models poorly predict new outbreaks or escalations of violence."Best case" scenarios with panel data fall short of workable early-warning systems.
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