4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Improving quantitative studies of international conflict: A conjecture

Journal

AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW
Volume 94, Issue 1, Pages 21-35

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.2307/2586378

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We address a well-known but infrequently discussed problem in the quantitative study of international conflict: Despite immense data collections, prestigious journals, and sophisticated analyses, empirical findings in the literature on international conflict are often unsatisfying. Many statistical results change from article to article and specification to specification. Accurate forecasts are nonexistent. In this article Me offer a conjecture about one source of this problem: The causes of conflict, theorized to be important but often found to be small or ephemeral, are indeed tiny for the vast majority of dyads, but they are large stable, and replicable wherever the ex ante probability of conflict is large. This simple idea has an unexpectedly rich away of observable implications, all consistent with the literature. We directly test our conjecture by formulating a statistical model that includes its critical features. Our approach, a version of a neural network model, uncovers some interesting structural features of international conflict and as one evaluative measure, forecasts substantially better than any previous effort. Moreover, this improvement comes at little cost, and it is easy to evaluate whether the model is a statistical improvement over the simpler models commonly used.

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