nep-dcm New Economics Papers
on Discrete Choice Models
Issue of 2012‒09‒09
one paper chosen by
Philip Yu
Hong Kong University

  1. A Discrete Choice Approach to Estimating Armed Conflicts’ Casualties: Revisiting the Numbers of a ‘Truth Commission’ By Silvio Rendon

  1. By: Silvio Rendon (Department of Economics, Stony Brook University)
    Abstract: I discuss the application of capture-recapture methods to estimating the total number of deaths in armed conflicts, and propose an alternative method based on a trivariate discrete choice model. Data come from the ‘Truth and Reconciliation Commission’ (TRC) of Peru, around 25000 deaths, classified by three sources of information, geographical strata, and perpetrator: the State and the Shining Path. In these data many killings have been only documented by one source, which makes a projection of killings unfeasible . TRC consultants Ball et al. (2003) tried to overcome this problem by means of a ‘residual estimation,’ consisting of merging data for different perpetrators. I show theoretically and empirically that this method over-estimates the number of deaths. Using a conditional trivariate Probit I estimate the total number of deaths in around 28000, 60% by the State, 40% by the Shining Path. This number is substantially lower and has a different composition than the around 69000 deaths, 30% by the State, 46% by the Shining Path, and 24% by ‘other perpetrators,’ calculated by Ball et al.
    Keywords: Armed Conflict, Capture-Recapture, Count Data, Discrete Choice, Human Rights, Maximum-Likelihood Estimation, Poisson Regression.
    JEL: D74 C35 C4 O54 P16
    Date: 2012–08
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nys:sunysb:12-03&r=dcm

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