Violence, Quantified
BY Nick Judd | Wednesday, August 31 2011
Fast Company explores the Department of Defense's latest foray into openness as it begins to make data on past conflicts available to researchers:
Academic studies of wars and conflicts have been around for centuries, but a new one funded by the U.S. Defense Department could change our fundamental understanding of war and peace. The massive, publicly accessible conflict data archive called "The Empirical Studies of Conflict (ESOC)" project, headed up by Stanford and Princeton University academics, will also publish working papers and other research showing their findings.
The project, around for a few years now, is ramping up its outreach, per Neil Ungerleider in FastCo. Expect an online portal into data on the wages of war:
Data from ESOC will be made available to academics and the public through a yet-to-be-created website; access to some data, however, will require vetting by ESOC depending on government restrictions. A white paper on the project obtained by Fast Company notes that data to be made available to researchers will, in some cases, “be extracted, sanitized and compiled in a format suitable for analysis by the academic and policy community.” In other words, the project will be paying close attention to anyone accessing information of particular relevance to current combatants.
This post has been updated.