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Add 1st level category for state-like entities? #3

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philip-schrodt opened this issue Jan 27, 2017 · 1 comment
Open

Add 1st level category for state-like entities? #3

philip-schrodt opened this issue Jan 27, 2017 · 1 comment

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@philip-schrodt
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Should we add a first-level code (comparable to the IMG -- international militarized group -- code to deal with areas that are relatively stable and "state-like" but not formally states: this would include

  • the former Yugoslavian entities during periods before they were states

  • areas that eventually become East Timor, Eritrea and South Sudan

  • current situations in West Bank, Gaza and the Hezbollah-controlled areas of southern Lebanon

  • Greek and Turkish sectors of Cyprus

  • ISIS areas for at least a couple years

  • maybe the two halves of Libya for the last couple of years?

  • same for Yemen if the current stalemate persists

  • definitely Iraqi Kurdistan (and potentially extensions into Syria)

  • various state-like sub-sets of Somalia

  • Western Sahara before it was absorbed by Morocco

This is a decidedly non-trivial group and, e.g. in the KEDS project we never really came up with a coherent way of dealing with former Yugoslavia, though I think in some later variant in the Penn State work we had something like a "contested territories" code. "NST" for "non-state territories" maybe? Or "SLT" for "state-like territory" (neither of these codes are in ISO-3166-alpha-3) -- implication here is that the area has relatively stable borders within which there is an entity exercising state-like control (as opposed to situations like Boko Haram and LRA where they are mostly just terrorizing people). This will be fuzzy -- but hey, that's why actor dictionaries need to be open source -- but may still be better than trying to pretend a recognized state is controlling the territory when they aren't.

@ahalterman
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I think this is worth thinking more about about. Hong Kong came up as an example of a related phenomenon: semi-autonomous regions within defined states.

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