Methodology

 

Domestic Armed Conflict

CATEGORY: Safety and Rule of Law
Sub-category: National Security
Indicator name:
Domestic Armed Conflict
Indicator name at source (if different):
Domestic Armed Conflict (both internal conflict and/or civil war, but excluding cross-border conflict)
Data provider:
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU)
Data source:
Commissioned Data
Publication years used in the Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG):
2006-2008
Website:
www.eiu.com

Definition of the indicator:

An expert assessment of the level of domestic armed conflict existing in a country, or of the likelihood of conflict developing in the near future. Domestic armed conflict is defined as internal conflict and/or civil war, but excludes cross-border conflict. Types and levels of conflict in a country are: no conflict with a low risk of conflict developing; sporadic conflict (isolated outbreaks of opposition violence despite firm government control); incursional conflict (firm government control with frequent armed incursions by the opposition); and territorial conflict (opposition has effective control over a region or regions).

Technical notes:

  • This indicator’s raw data range from 0 to 100 with a low score being best and a high score being worst. To produce the IIAG score the data were normalised using the Min-Max method to transform them to a scale of 0 to 100, where 100 is always the best score possible.
  • The years stated in the EIU-commissioned data reflect performance in that same year. The latest available data are for 2008, which correspond to 2007/08 in the IIAG.
  • Data are not available for 2001-2005 and have been estimated using mean substitution and/or extrapolation.

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