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Change Point Analysis of Historical Battle Deaths

Brennen T. Fagan, Marina I. Knight, Niall J. MacKay, A. Jamie Wood

2020Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A (Statistics in Society)21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Summary It has been claimed and disputed that World War II has been followed by a ‘long peace’: an unprecedented decline of war. We conduct a full change point analysis of well-documented, publicly available battle deaths data sets, using new techniques that enable the robust detection of changes in the statistical properties of such heavy-tailed data. We first test and calibrate these techniques. We then demonstrate the existence of changes, independent of data presentation, in the early to mid-19th century, as the Congress of Vienna system moved towards its collapse, in the early to mid-20th century, bracketing the World Wars, and in the late 20th century, as the world reconfigured around the end of the Cold War. Our analysis provides a methodology for future investigations and an empirical basis for political and historical discussions.

Topics & Concepts

BattlePoliticsHistoryBracketing (phenomenology)Cold warFirst world warStatistical analysisPoint (geometry)Test (biology)Period (music)Quantitative analysis (chemistry)Empirical researchPolitical scienceGeographyTurning pointEconomic historyWorld War IIEconomyInterrogationStatistical hypothesis testingEstimationOperations researchData Analysis with RStatistical Methods and InferenceEconomic Policies and Impacts
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