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@article{ Hegre2019,
 title = {ViEWS: A political violence early-warning system},
 author = {Hegre, Håvard and Allansson, Marie and Basedau, Matthias and Colaresi, Michael and Croicu, Mihai and Fjelde, Hanne and Hoyles, Frederick and Hultman, Lisa and Högbladh, Stina and Jansen, Remco and Mouhleb, Naima and Muhammad, Sayyed Auwn and Nilsson, Desirée and Nygård, Håvard Mokleiv and Olafsdottir, Gudlaug and Petrova, Kristina and Randahl, David and Rød, Espen Geelmuyden and Schneider, Gerald and Uexkull, Nina von and Vestby, Jonas},
 journal = {Journal of Peace Research},
 number = {2},
 pages = {155-174},
 volume = {56},
 year = {2019},
 issn = {1460-3578},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343319823860},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-62201-9},
 abstract = {This article presents ViEWS - a political violence early-warning system that seeks to be maximally transparent, publicly available, and have uniform coverage, and sketches the methodological innovations required to achieve these objectives. ViEWS produces monthly forecasts at the country and subnational level for 36 months into the future and all three UCDP types of organized violence: state-based conflict, non-state conflict, and one-sided violence in Africa. The article presents the methodology and data behind these forecasts, evaluates their predictive performance, provides selected forecasts for October 2018 through October 2021, and indicates future extensions. ViEWS is built as an ensemble of constituent models designed to optimize its predictions. Each of these represents a theme that the conflict research literature suggests is relevant, or implements a specific statistical/machine-learning approach. Current forecasts indicate a persistence of conflict in regions in Africa with a recent history of political violence but also alert to new conflicts such as in Southern Cameroon and Northern Mozambique. The subsequent evaluation additionally shows that ViEWS is able to accurately capture the long-term behavior of established political violence, as well as diffusion processes such as the spread of violence in Cameroon. The performance demonstrated here indicates that ViEWS can be a useful complement to non-public conflict-warning systems, and also serves as a reference against which future improvements can be evaluated.},
 keywords = {innere Sicherheit; domestic security; politischer Konflikt; political conflict; internationaler Konflikt; international conflict; Konfliktpotential; conflict potential; Konfliktbewältigung; conflict mediation; Konfliktlösung; conflict resolution; Konfliktforschung; conflict research; Prävention; prevention; Frühwarnsystem; early warning system; Afrika; Africa}}