The Afghanistan-Pakistan Wars, 2008-2009: Micro-geographies, Conflict Diffusion, and Clusters of Violence
- 1 July 2010
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Eurasian Geography and Economics
- Vol. 51 (4) , 437-471
- https://doi.org/10.2747/1539-7216.51.4.437
Abstract
A team of political geographers analyzes over 5,000 violent events collected from media reports for the Afghanistan and Pakistan conflicts during 2008 and 2009. The violent events are geocoded to precise locations and the authors employ an exploratory spatial data analysis approach to examine the recent dynamics of the wars. By mapping the violence and examining its temporal dimensions, the authors explain its diffusion from traditional foci along the border between the two countries. While violence is still overwhelmingly concentrated in the Pashtun regions in both countries, recent policy shifts by the American and Pakistani governments in the conduct of the war are reflected in a sizeable increase in overall violence and its geographic spread to key cities. The authors identify and map the clusters (hotspots) of conflict where the violence is significantly higher than expected and examine their shifts over the two-year period. Special attention is paid to the targeting strategy of drone missile strikes...Keywords
This publication has 62 references indexed in Scilit:
- The American Presence in Afghanistan-Pakistan and the West Asian Expanse: Observations on Environment and CultureEurasian Geography and Economics, 2010
- A Socio-Political and -Cultural Model of the War in Afghanistan1International Studies Review, 2010
- What Causes Civil Wars? Integrating Quantitative Research FindingsInternational Studies Review, 2009
- Poverty and Civil War EventsJournal of Conflict Resolution, 2009
- The Evolution of Sectarian Conflicts in Pakistan and the Ever-Changing Face of Islamic ViolenceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, 2007
- Monitoring Trends in Global Combat: A New Dataset of Battle DeathsEuropean Journal of Population, 2005
- A Space–Time Permutation Scan Statistic for Disease Outbreak DetectionPLoS Medicine, 2005
- The city as arena, hub and prey patterns of violence in Kabul and KarachiEnvironment and Urbanization, 2004
- Relation between satellite observed visible-near infrared emissions, population, economic activity and electric power consumptionInternational Journal of Remote Sensing, 1997
- Bringing geography back to the study of international relations: Spatial dependence and regional context in Africa, 1966–1978International Interactions, 1991