Perceived Mass Atrocities

The Diplometrics Program has built and released databases on international organizations, diplomatic exchanges (embassies), and treaties monitored by the United Nations, including the Country & Organization Leader Travel Database (COLT). The Diplometrics Program has also developed tools to help visualize and structure the data, such as the UN Voting Coincidence Dashboard. This data feeds a research agenda that is interested in measuring and modeling international relations and will inform the International Politics submodule of the International Futures (IFs) model.

The project expects to add to this data collection effort by producing data sets on non-state actors including international non-governmental organizations, multinational corporations, and others.

  • Why was PMAD created?

    The risk factors and consequences of atrocities are deeply interconnected with questions of intra- and interstate stability and conflict, economic development, colonialism, and gender equality as well as atrocity crime monitoring and prevention. Built to support the U.S. Congress’s Elie Wiesel Genocide and Atrocities Prevention Act of 2018, the Perceived Mass Atrocities Dataset (PMAD) enables the systematic comparison of the occurrence and magnitude of seven atrocity types, in addition to group-perpetrated violence against women and LGBTQIA+ groups, with aggregate atrocities indices for 196 countries from 2018–2022.

  • How do you define perceived mass atrocities?

    We define a perceived mass atrocity as an act of violence against 25 or more civilians or otherwise defenseless individuals with the intent of destroying their social, cultural, ethnic, religious, or political group—or intimidating their group by creating a perception of imminent threat to its survival—through systematic or random, planned or unplanned acts by a group of official or unofficial state forces or non-state actors directly or indirectly resulting in death, injury, or widespread damage of property, excluding acts of terrorism that do not involve the pursuit of or threat of group elimination.

  • How does PMAD create new research opportunities?

    PMAD offers a foundation for quantitative studies of atrocities as well as more qualitative, process-focused research of lethal and less-lethal violence with its single, divisible framework. The PMAD data highlight several regions where analysis of atrocities using data on only lethal atrocities would be inadequate. 

     

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April 16, 2024

Sustainable Development Goal Attainment in the Wake of COVID-19: Simulating an Ambitious Policy Push

Journal Article | Taylor Hanna

Full Citation: Hanna, T.; Hughes, B.B.; Irfan, M.T.; Bohl, D.K.; Solórzano et al., Sustainable Development Goal Attainment in the Wake of COVID-19: Simulating an Ambitious Policy Push. Sustainability 2024, 16, 3309. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16083309

April 09, 2024

Opinion: There is more to NATO burden sharing than the 2% spending dogma

Op-Eds | Collin Meisel

Full Citation: Meisel, C. (2024, April 9). Opinion: There is more to NATO burden sharing than the 2% spending dogma. Defense News. https://www.defensenews.com/opinion/2024/04/09/there-is-more-to-nato-burden-sharing-than-the-2-spending-dogma/

April 01, 2024

Beyond Ukraine: Forecasting the Future of War - Chapter by Collin Meisel

Books & Book Chapters | Collin Meisel

Full Citation: Sweijs, T. J., & Michaels, J. H. (2024). Beyond Ukraine: Debating the Future of War. https://global.oup.com/academic/product/beyond-ukraine-9780197790243?cc=us&lang=en&#

February 20, 2024

Accelerating Change But Not Necessarily an Inflection Point

Op-Eds | Collin Meisel

Full Citation: Meisel, C. (2024, February 20). Accelerating Change But Not Necessarily an Inflection Point. Stimson. https://www.stimson.org/2024/accelerating-change-but-not-necessarily-an-inflection-point/

February 15, 2024

Sahel Human Development Report 2023

Reports & Briefs | Jonathan Moyer

United Nations Development Programme

January 22, 2024

A double-edged sword into a plowshare: Analyzing geopolitical implications of alternative socioeconomic development pathways

Journal Article | Jonathan Moyer

By: Moyer, J. D. (2024). A double-edged sword into a plowshare: Analyzing geopolitical implications of alternative socioeconomic development pathways. One Earth. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2024.01.002

January 16, 2024

Supply, demand and polarization challenges facing US climate policies

Journal Article | Jonathan Moyer

By: Burgess, M. G., Leaf Van Boven, Wagner, G., Wong‐Parodi, G., Baker, K., Boykoff, M., Converse, B. A., Dilling, L., Gilligan, J. M., Yoel Inbar, Markowitz, E. M., Moyer, J. D., Newton, P. W., Raimi, K. T., Shrum, T. R., & Vandenbergh, M. P. (2024).

January 15, 2024

Prospects for Children in 2024: Cooperation in a Fragmented World

Reports & Briefs | Taylor Hanna

Full Citation: UNICEF Innocenti - Global Office of Research and Foresight, Global Outlook 2024: Prospects for children - Cooperation in a fragmented world, UNICEF Innocenti, Florence, January 2024