Publication by Cédric Chambru, Associate Professor at the Economics Department, in American Political Science Review, August 22, 2023
Abstract
The Historical Social Conflict Database (HiSCoD) is an ongoing project designed to provide to scholars and society at large with a set of resources for analyzing social conflict from the Middle Ages to the second half of the nineteenth century (c. 1000–c. 1870). Based on original archival research and existing repositories, the aim is to provide a global database of social conflict in past societies by collecting, aggregating, documenting, and harmonizing instances of conflict. As of today, the database contains data on more than twenty thousand events, from fiscal scuffles to urban revolts involving thousands of individuals. For every event, we provide information on the date, location, type of conflict, and, when possible, number of participants, participation of women, and a summary of events.
Reference
Chambru C, Maneuvrier-Hervieu P. "Introducing HiSCoD: A New Gateway for the Study of Historical Social Conflict". American Political Science Review. 2024;118(2):1084-1091.
DOI : 10.1017/S000305542300076X