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| ICPSR Study No.: | 9286 |
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Persistent URL:
| http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09286 |
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| Title: | International Crisis Behavior Project, 1918-2004 |
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| Principal Investigator(s): | Michael Brecher, McGill University |
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| Jonathan Wilkenfeld, University of Maryland |
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| Bibliographic Citation: | Brecher, Michael, and Jonathan Wilkenfeld. INTERNATIONAL CRISIS BEHAVIOR PROJECT, 1918-2004 [Computer file]. ICPSR09286-v7. College Park, MD: Michael Brecher and Jonathan Wilkenfeld, University of Maryland [producers], 2007. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2007-12-14. doi:10.3886/ICPSR09286 |
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| Summary: | This data collection was produced as part of the
International Crisis Behavior Project, a research effort aimed at
investigating 20th-century interstate crises and the behavior of
states under externally generated stress. To this end, the data
describe, over a 86-year period, the sources, processes, and outcomes
of all military-security crises involving states. Variables were
collected at both the micro/state actor level and the
macro/international system level. At the macro level, seven dimensions
of crisis were measured: crisis setting, crisis breakpoint-exitpoint,
crisis management technique, great power/superpower activity,
international organization involvement, crisis outcome, and crisis
severity. Additional macro-level variables indicate various aspects of
geography, polarity, system level, conflict type, power discrepancy,
and involvement by powers. At the state actor level, variables
measuring five dimensions of crisis were compiled: crisis trigger,
state actor behavior, great power/superpower activity, international
organization involvement, and crisis outcome. Additional micro-level
variables indicate the role of war in each crisis. Others measure
several kinds of state attributes: age, territory, regime
characteristics, state capability, state values, and social, economic,
and political conditions. |
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| Subject Term(s): | conflict, crisis management, foreign policy, international alliances, international conflict, international organizations, international relations, militarism, military intervention, war, world problems |
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| Geographic Coverage: | Global |
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| Time Period: | December 22, 1917 - December 31, 2004 |
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| Date(s) of Collection: | 1977 - 2004 |
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| Universe: | Part 1: All international crises occurring between
December 22, 1917, and December 31, 2004, characterized by the
following two conditions: (1) a distortion in the type and an increase
in the intensity of disruptive interactions between two or more
adversaries, with an accompanying high probability of military
hostilities, or, during a war, an adverse change in the military
balance, and (2) a challenge to the existing structure of an
international system -- global, dominant, or subsystem -- posed by the
higher-than-normal conflictual interactions. Part 2: All foreign
policy crises experienced by states due to their involvement in the
international crises defined above. The principal investigators define
a foreign policy crisis as a situation in which three conditions,
deriving from a change in a state's external or internal environment,
are perceived by the highest-level decision-makers of the state: (a) a
threat to basic values, (b) an awareness of finite time for response
to the external threat to basic values, and (c) a high probability of
involvement in military hostilities. |
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| Data Type: | aggregate/transaction data |
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| Data Collection Notes: | (1) The two parts of this collection are linked by
common identification numbers. The unit of observation for Part 1,
which contains the macro-level data, is the international crisis. The
unit of observation for Part 2, which contains the micro-level data,
is the crisis actors involved. In all, the data cover 445
international crises involving 979 state actors. Both parts include
non-numeric data. (2) A full description of the datasets, coding
procedures, case summaries, and analyses are contained in Michael
Brecher and Jonathan Wilkenfeld, A STUDY OF CRISIS, Ann Arbor, MI:
University of Michigan Press, 2000. as well as the study Web site,
http://www.cidcm.umd.edu/icb/. (3) Data for two cases in an
ongoing/interim category, Iran Nuclear and North Korea Nuclear, were
coded as pending. Coding is anticipated to be completed in the coming
year. |
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| Note: | A list of the data formats available for this study can be found in the
summary of holdings. Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the
file manifest. |
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| Original ICPSR Release: | 1990-03-02 |
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| Version History: | The last update of this study occurred on 2007-12-14. |
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| 2007-12-14 - Crises for 2004 have been added to the
dataset. These new crises are DRC-Rwanda (#444) and South
Ossetia/Abkhazia (#445). For international crises, the GLOBACTM and
GLOBEFAC variables now include an additional category for cases in
which the global organization authorized the use of military force by
members to enforce resolutions. This change also affects the actor
level variable GLOBACT. Two potential protracted conflicts are on the
watch list: DRC/Rwanda, and Georgia/Russia. We are currently
evaluating the crises involving these pairs of states, and a
definitive decision will be made by the next release. Two cases are in
an ongoing/interim category: Iran Nuclear (2002) and North Korea
Nuclear. These cases, each of which probably includes several crises,
are expected to be coded during the coming year. As was the case with
past releases of the ICB datasets, a number of minor coding changes
have been made in earlier cases. |
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| 2006-05-15 - Six new cases have been added for 2002
as well as the data producers's new coding changes. Also, a new set of
15 variables addressing the mediation of international crises has been
added. |
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| 2004-05-13 - The codebooks and SAS and SPSS data
definition statements have been revised to reflect the data producer's
new coding for the mediation variable at the international system
level and minor corrections to several other variables. |
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| 2003-05-16 - New data for the years 1995-2001 were
added, and the codebooks were replaced. |
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| 1998-02-10 - New data for the years 1989-1994 were
added, and the codebooks were replaced. Also, SPSS export files were
added to the collection. |
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| Dataset(s): | - DS1: International Crises
- DS2: Crisis Actors
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