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Casualty recording

Casualty recording is the systematic and continuous process of documenting individual direct deaths from armed conflict or widespread violence. It aims to create a comprehensive account of all deaths within a determined scope, usually bound by time and location.

Nyanza Genocide Memorial Site, monument listing names of victims

Parameters edit

At minimum, casualty recording typically involves documenting the date and location of a violent incident; the number of people killed; the means of violence or category of weapon used; and the party responsible.[1][2][3] Casualty recording differs from casualty tracking by military actors to track the effects of their operations on the civilian population for the purpose of improving their procedures and reducing civilian casualties.[4]

A defining feature of casualty recording is that it is victim-centric and seeks to establish the identity of every fatality including name, age, sex, and other relevant demographic details.[1] Where relevant to the conflict context, this may also include ethnicity and religious or political affiliation. However, depending on the aims and resources of the organisation conducting the recording, a particular initiative may record only a specific subset of deaths. Subsets may include, for example, deaths caused by a specific belligerent or weapons type, or deaths of a particular segment of the population, such as children.

Casualty recording focuses on documenting direct deaths from armed violence. It does not normally include deaths caused by the indirect or reverberating effects of conflict.[5] Some casualty recording initiatives document injuries as well as deaths. Casualty records may overlap with, or operate in conjunction with, records of persons who have gone missing during a conflict or period of violence.[6]

Aims and uses edit

Practitioners have different aims and motivations for conducting casualty recording. Typically these are grounded in considerations relating to international humanitarian law or human rights law.[7][8] Casualty records have also been used to support some humanitarian disarmament initiatives.[9]

The purported aims of casualty records include:

  • Recognising the dignity and rights of victims and their families, including the right to life and the right to the truth.[8] This work often overlaps with efforts to trace missing people in situations of armed conflict.
  • Supporting accountability and peace building processes including memorialisation, transitional justice and criminal prosecutions for war crimes or crimes against humanity.[10] These activities can play an important role in reducing cycles of violence and promoting community reconciliation.
  • Supporting the protection of civilians by providing information to reduce unintended consequences of military activities and improve humanitarian response planning.[11][12][13]
  • Informing media reporting and policy makers on conflict dynamics.[14]
  • Informing, monitoring and improving protection measures aimed at specific populations affected by armed violence including children, women, persons with disabilities, journalists, health workers and older persons.[9][15]
  • Enabling victims' families to receive reparation, compensation and access to services, as well as inheritance rights.[16]
  • Identifying the unintended and unacceptable harm to civilians caused by the use of certain weapons. Casualty data on anti-personnel landmines and cluster munitions helped drive international efforts to ban these weapons, and information on the effects of explosive weapons in populated areas is informing efforts to curb their use.[17][18]
 
Memorial of victims of Kosovo war

History edit

The twenty-first century practice of monitoring and publishing detailed online information on the human casualties of armed conflicts is sometimes associated with the Iraq Body Count project that started monitoring Iraqi deaths in the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The Iraq Body Count estimates, the 2004 and 2006 Lancet surveys of Iraq War casualties and the ORB survey of Iraq War casualties led to several years of academic debate over the accuracy of the various surveys of the total casualties of the Iraq War.[19]

Methodology and standards edit

Approaches to casualty recording vary depending on the context, purpose and resources of the organisation responsible. In 2016, Standards for Casualty Recording were published by the UK-based NGO Every Casualty Counts, in an effort to harmonise approaches across the field and promote best practice.[20][21]

The data gathered by a casualty recording project will generally be stored in an electronic or paper-based database, but there is no standard format for sharing or publishing the final results. Some casualty recorders, such as Iraq Body Count project and Yemen Data Project, make their records publicly available online and searchable. Casualty recorders have also published books of their records, such as the Kosovo Memory Book and Lost Lives (relating to deaths from the conflict in Northern Ireland).[22][23] Lost Lives was subsequently reproduced as a documentary film in 2019.[24] Casualty data may also be used to produce digital or physical memorials of those who died, as in the case of Remembering The Ones We Lost, which memorialises individuals who were killed or went missing during the conflict in South Sudan.

Practitioners edit

Casualty recording is frequently conducted by civil society organisations in the absence of official recording processes led by state entities.[25] In some armed conflict situations, public services normally involved in recording deaths (including hospitals and other health services, as well as coroners and police forces) are no longer functioning effectively. There may also be political reasons why state authorities do not publish or share information on conflict related deaths. Some internationally mandated entities, including UN peacekeeping missions or commissions of inquiry, conduct casualty recording as part of their broader work.

Examples of organisations which conduct, or have conducted, casualty recording include:

Non-conflict casualty recording edit

Although casualty recording typically relates to deaths resulting from armed conflict, specialised casualty recording projects not directly related to armed violence also exist. These include projects focused on recording deaths from gender based violence and deaths or disappearances of migrants, homeless people and other vulnerable groups. Examples of such initiatives include:

  • Committee to Protect Journalists, recording deaths of journalists worldwide
  • Dying Homeless, recording deaths of homeless people in the UK, by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism[28]
  • Gun Violence Archive, recording all gun violence incidents, including deaths, in the USA.
  • Missing Migrants, tracking deaths along international migratory routes, by the International Organisation of Migration
  • Los feminicidios en México, recording deaths from gender based violence in Mexico

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Standards for Casualty Recording. Every Casualty Worldwide. 2016.
  2. ^ Taylor, Rachel (6 May 2021). "Standards for Casualty Recording: Summaries". Every Casualty Counts. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  3. ^ "Good Practice in Conflict Casualty Recording". css.ethz.ch. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2023-11-16.
  4. ^ "Backgrounder: Tracking Civilian Harm". Center for Civilians in Conflict. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  5. ^ ":: everycasualty". www.everycasualty.org. 15 October 2019. from the original on 2019-10-29. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  6. ^ "Clarifying the fate of missing persons". Humanitarian Law & Policy Blog. 2016-09-15. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  7. ^ Russell, Simon (2016-11-08). "Casualty recording in and for the modern age: Why standards matter". Humanitarian Law & Policy Blog. from the original on 2019-10-29. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  8. ^ a b Jewell, Nicholas P.; Spagat, Michael; Jewell, Britta L. (2018). "Accounting for Civilian Casualties: From the Past to the Future". Social Science History. 42 (3): 379–410. doi:10.1017/ssh.2018.9. ISSN 0145-5532.
  9. ^ a b Hicks, Madelyn Hsiao-Rei; Dardagan, Hamit; Serdán, Gabriela Guerrero; Bagnall, Peter M.; Sloboda, John A.; Spagat, Michael (2009-04-16). "The Weapons That Kill Civilians — Deaths of Children and Noncombatants in Iraq, 2003–2008". New England Journal of Medicine. 360 (16): 1585–1588. doi:10.1056/NEJMp0807240. ISSN 0028-4793. PMID 19369663.
  10. ^ ":: everycasualty". www.everycasualty.org. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  11. ^ Dardagan, Hamit; Sloboda, John; Iron, Richard (Summer 2010). "In Everyone's Interest: Recording All The Dead, Not Just Our Own" (PDF). British Army Journal. 149. (PDF) from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  12. ^ "UN Protection of Civilians :: everycasualty". www.everycasualty.org. 12 July 2012. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  13. ^ "V. Casualty recording in armed conflict: methods and normative issues : SIPRI Yearbook 2016". www.sipriyearbook.org. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  14. ^ Urist, Jacoba (2014-09-29). "Which Deaths Matter?". The Atlantic. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  15. ^ Guha-Sapir, Debarati; Schlüter, Benjamin; Rodriguez-Llanes, Jose Manuel; Lillywhite, Louis; Hicks, Madelyn Hsiao-Rei (2018-01-01). "Patterns of civilian and child deaths due to war-related violence in Syria: a comparative analysis from the Violation Documentation Center dataset, 2011–16". The Lancet Global Health. 6 (1): e103–e110. doi:10.1016/S2214-109X(17)30469-2. ISSN 2214-109X. PMID 29226821.
  16. ^ "Counting the Cost: Casualty recording practices and realities". AOAV. 2014-04-16. from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  17. ^ "Article 36 Casualty Recording UNGA" (PDF). article36.org. October 2013. (PDF) from the original on 6 January 2017. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  18. ^ "Article36 | Article 36 is a specialist non-profit organisation, focused on reducing harm from weapons. : Casualty recording, critical argument and campaigning against weapons". www.article36.org. from the original on 2019-11-06. Retrieved 2019-11-06.
  19. ^ Levy, Barry S.; Sidel, Victor W. (March 2016). "Documenting the Effects of Armed Conflict on Population Health". Annual Review of Public Health. 37: 205–218. doi:10.1146/annurev-publhealth-032315-021913. PMID 26989827. Although the Roberts and Burnham studies faced some criticism in the news media and elsewhere, part of which may have been politically motivated, these studies have been widely viewed among peers as the most rigorous investigations of Iraq War–related mortality among Iraqi civilians; we agree with this assessment and believe that the Hagopian study is also scientifically rigorous. Although the methodology and results in the four studies cited here have varied somewhat, it is clear that the Iraq War caused, directly and indirectly, a very large number of deaths among Iraqi civilians—which, in fact, may have been underestimated by these scientifically conservative studies. A paper by Tapp and colleagues and a recent report by three country affiliates of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War have extensively reviewed these four epidemiological studies as well as other studies that attempted to assess the impact of the Iraq War on morbidity and mortality.
  20. ^ "International launch of Standards for Casualty Recording: Putting principles into practice". International Committee of the Red Cross. 2016-10-21. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  21. ^ "STANDARDS FOR CASUALTY RECORDING" (PDF). Every Casualty Worldwide. 2016. (PDF) from the original on 2022-01-03. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  22. ^ "Experts Greet HLC's 'Kosovo Memory Book'". Balkan Insight. 2015-02-04. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  23. ^ "Lost Lives book a decade-long labour of love for five authors". belfasttelegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  24. ^ Lost Lives, from the original on 2019-10-31, retrieved 2019-10-30
  25. ^ "Study into good practice :: Every Casualty". www.everycasualty.org. from the original on 2019-10-29. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  26. ^ "Casualties | Reports | Monitor". www.the-monitor.org. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  27. ^ "BBC News | Northern Ireland | Turning the pages on lost lives". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  28. ^ "Dying Homeless: Counting the deaths of homeless people across the UK". The Bureau of Investigative Journalism (en-GB). Retrieved 2022-01-03.

casualty, recording, systematic, continuous, process, documenting, individual, direct, deaths, from, armed, conflict, widespread, violence, aims, create, comprehensive, account, deaths, within, determined, scope, usually, bound, time, location, nyanza, genocid. Casualty recording is the systematic and continuous process of documenting individual direct deaths from armed conflict or widespread violence It aims to create a comprehensive account of all deaths within a determined scope usually bound by time and location Nyanza Genocide Memorial Site monument listing names of victims Contents 1 Parameters 2 Aims and uses 3 History 4 Methodology and standards 5 Practitioners 6 Non conflict casualty recording 7 See also 8 ReferencesParameters editAt minimum casualty recording typically involves documenting the date and location of a violent incident the number of people killed the means of violence or category of weapon used and the party responsible 1 2 3 Casualty recording differs from casualty tracking by military actors to track the effects of their operations on the civilian population for the purpose of improving their procedures and reducing civilian casualties 4 A defining feature of casualty recording is that it is victim centric and seeks to establish the identity of every fatality including name age sex and other relevant demographic details 1 Where relevant to the conflict context this may also include ethnicity and religious or political affiliation However depending on the aims and resources of the organisation conducting the recording a particular initiative may record only a specific subset of deaths Subsets may include for example deaths caused by a specific belligerent or weapons type or deaths of a particular segment of the population such as children Casualty recording focuses on documenting direct deaths from armed violence It does not normally include deaths caused by the indirect or reverberating effects of conflict 5 Some casualty recording initiatives document injuries as well as deaths Casualty records may overlap with or operate in conjunction with records of persons who have gone missing during a conflict or period of violence 6 Aims and uses editPractitioners have different aims and motivations for conducting casualty recording Typically these are grounded in considerations relating to international humanitarian law or human rights law 7 8 Casualty records have also been used to support some humanitarian disarmament initiatives 9 The purported aims of casualty records include Recognising the dignity and rights of victims and their families including the right to life and the right to the truth 8 This work often overlaps with efforts to trace missing people in situations of armed conflict Supporting accountability and peace building processes including memorialisation transitional justice and criminal prosecutions for war crimes or crimes against humanity 10 These activities can play an important role in reducing cycles of violence and promoting community reconciliation Supporting the protection of civilians by providing information to reduce unintended consequences of military activities and improve humanitarian response planning 11 12 13 Informing media reporting and policy makers on conflict dynamics 14 Informing monitoring and improving protection measures aimed at specific populations affected by armed violence including children women persons with disabilities journalists health workers and older persons 9 15 Enabling victims families to receive reparation compensation and access to services as well as inheritance rights 16 Identifying the unintended and unacceptable harm to civilians caused by the use of certain weapons Casualty data on anti personnel landmines and cluster munitions helped drive international efforts to ban these weapons and information on the effects of explosive weapons in populated areas is informing efforts to curb their use 17 18 nbsp Memorial of victims of Kosovo warHistory editThe twenty first century practice of monitoring and publishing detailed online information on the human casualties of armed conflicts is sometimes associated with the Iraq Body Count project that started monitoring Iraqi deaths in the 2003 invasion of Iraq The Iraq Body Count estimates the 2004 and 2006 Lancet surveys of Iraq War casualties and the ORB survey of Iraq War casualties led to several years of academic debate over the accuracy of the various surveys of the total casualties of the Iraq War 19 Methodology and standards editApproaches to casualty recording vary depending on the context purpose and resources of the organisation responsible In 2016 Standards for Casualty Recording were published by the UK based NGO Every Casualty Counts in an effort to harmonise approaches across the field and promote best practice 20 21 The data gathered by a casualty recording project will generally be stored in an electronic or paper based database but there is no standard format for sharing or publishing the final results Some casualty recorders such as Iraq Body Count project and Yemen Data Project make their records publicly available online and searchable Casualty recorders have also published books of their records such as the Kosovo Memory Book and Lost Lives relating to deaths from the conflict in Northern Ireland 22 23 Lost Lives was subsequently reproduced as a documentary film in 2019 24 Casualty data may also be used to produce digital or physical memorials of those who died as in the case of Remembering The Ones We Lost which memorialises individuals who were killed or went missing during the conflict in South Sudan Practitioners editCasualty recording is frequently conducted by civil society organisations in the absence of official recording processes led by state entities 25 In some armed conflict situations public services normally involved in recording deaths including hospitals and other health services as well as coroners and police forces are no longer functioning effectively There may also be political reasons why state authorities do not publish or share information on conflict related deaths Some internationally mandated entities including UN peacekeeping missions or commissions of inquiry conduct casualty recording as part of their broader work Examples of organisations which conduct or have conducted casualty recording include Action on Armed Violence UK Airwars Al Mezan Center for Human Rights B Tselem for Israel and the Israeli occupied territories The Bureau of Investigative Journalism Centre for Border Studies Jindal School of International Affairs India Colombian Campaign Against Landmines Colombia Sin Minas Conflict Archive on the Internet CAIN Northern Ireland Conflict Analysis Resource Centre Colombia Crisis Tracker Forensic Anthropology Foundation of Guatemala Humanitarian Law Centre Kosovo Humanitarian Law Centre Serbia Humanitarian Outcomes Aid Worker Security Database The Human Rights Center Georgia Iniskoy for Peace and Democracy Organisation Somalia INSEC in Nepal International Commission on Missing Persons Iraq Body Count project ORB survey of Iraq War casualties Lancet surveys of Iraq War casualties Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor 26 Lost Lives Northern Ireland 27 Nigeria Watch Omeria Organisation Pakistan Body Count Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies Palestinian Centre for Human Rights Somali Human Rights Association SOHRA Surveillance System for Attacks on Healthcare SSA World Health Organisation Syria Justice and Accountability Syrian Centre for Statistics and Research Syrian Network for Human Rights Tghat Victim List for the Tigray War that started in November 2020 United Nations Commission of Inquiry on the 2018 protests in the Occupied Palestinian Territory United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq Violations Documentation Center in Syria Yemen Data ProjectNon conflict casualty recording editAlthough casualty recording typically relates to deaths resulting from armed conflict specialised casualty recording projects not directly related to armed violence also exist These include projects focused on recording deaths from gender based violence and deaths or disappearances of migrants homeless people and other vulnerable groups Examples of such initiatives include Committee to Protect Journalists recording deaths of journalists worldwide Dying Homeless recording deaths of homeless people in the UK by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism 28 Gun Violence Archive recording all gun violence incidents including deaths in the USA Missing Migrants tracking deaths along international migratory routes by the International Organisation of Migration Los feminicidios en Mexico recording deaths from gender based violence in MexicoSee also editRudolph RummelReferences edit a b Standards for Casualty Recording Every Casualty Worldwide 2016 Taylor Rachel 6 May 2021 Standards for Casualty Recording Summaries Every Casualty Counts Retrieved 16 November 2023 Good Practice in Conflict Casualty Recording css ethz ch Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2023 11 16 Backgrounder Tracking Civilian Harm Center for Civilians in Conflict Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 everycasualty www everycasualty org 15 October 2019 Archived from the original on 2019 10 29 Retrieved 2019 10 30 Clarifying the fate of missing persons Humanitarian Law amp Policy Blog 2016 09 15 Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 Russell Simon 2016 11 08 Casualty recording in and for the modern age Why standards matter Humanitarian Law amp Policy Blog Archived from the original on 2019 10 29 Retrieved 2019 10 30 a b Jewell Nicholas P Spagat Michael Jewell Britta L 2018 Accounting for Civilian Casualties From the Past to the Future Social Science History 42 3 379 410 doi 10 1017 ssh 2018 9 ISSN 0145 5532 a b Hicks Madelyn Hsiao Rei Dardagan Hamit Serdan Gabriela Guerrero Bagnall Peter M Sloboda John A Spagat Michael 2009 04 16 The Weapons That Kill Civilians Deaths of Children and Noncombatants in Iraq 2003 2008 New England Journal of Medicine 360 16 1585 1588 doi 10 1056 NEJMp0807240 ISSN 0028 4793 PMID 19369663 everycasualty www everycasualty org Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 Dardagan Hamit Sloboda John Iron Richard Summer 2010 In Everyone s Interest Recording All The Dead Not Just Our Own PDF British Army Journal 149 Archived PDF from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 UN Protection of Civilians everycasualty www everycasualty org 12 July 2012 Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 V Casualty recording in armed conflict methods and normative issues SIPRI Yearbook 2016 www sipriyearbook org Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 Urist Jacoba 2014 09 29 Which Deaths Matter The Atlantic Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 Guha Sapir Debarati Schluter Benjamin Rodriguez Llanes Jose Manuel Lillywhite Louis Hicks Madelyn Hsiao Rei 2018 01 01 Patterns of civilian and child deaths due to war related violence in Syria a comparative analysis from the Violation Documentation Center dataset 2011 16 The Lancet Global Health 6 1 e103 e110 doi 10 1016 S2214 109X 17 30469 2 ISSN 2214 109X PMID 29226821 Counting the Cost Casualty recording practices and realities AOAV 2014 04 16 Archived from the original on 2019 10 30 Retrieved 2019 10 30 Article 36 Casualty Recording UNGA PDF article36 org October 2013 Archived PDF from the original on 6 January 2017 Retrieved 30 October 2019 Article36 Article 36 is a specialist non profit organisation focused on reducing harm from weapons Casualty recording critical argument and campaigning against weapons www article36 org Archived from the original on 2019 11 06 Retrieved 2019 11 06 Levy Barry S Sidel Victor W March 2016 Documenting the Effects of Armed Conflict on Population Health Annual Review of Public Health 37 205 218 doi 10 1146 annurev publhealth 032315 021913 PMID 26989827 Although the Roberts and Burnham studies faced some criticism in the news media and elsewhere part of which may have been politically motivated these studies have been widely viewed among peers as the most rigorous investigations of Iraq War related mortality among Iraqi civilians we agree with this assessment and believe that the Hagopian study is also scientifically rigorous Although the methodology and results in the four studies cited here have varied somewhat it is clear that the Iraq War caused directly and indirectly a very large number of deaths among Iraqi civilians which in fact may have been underestimated by these scientifically conservative studies A paper by Tapp and colleagues and a recent report by three country affiliates of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War have extensively reviewed these four epidemiological studies as well as other studies that attempted to assess the impact of the Iraq War on morbidity and mortality International launch of Standards for Casualty Recording Putting principles into practice International Committee of the Red Cross 2016 10 21 Retrieved 2022 01 03 STANDARDS FOR CASUALTY RECORDING PDF Every Casualty Worldwide 2016 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 01 03 Retrieved 3 January 2022 Experts Greet HLC s Kosovo Memory Book Balkan Insight 2015 02 04 Retrieved 2022 01 03 Lost Lives book a decade long labour of love for five authors belfasttelegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2022 01 03 Lost Lives archived from the original on 2019 10 31 retrieved 2019 10 30 Study into good practice Every Casualty www everycasualty org Archived from the original on 2019 10 29 Retrieved 2019 10 30 Casualties Reports Monitor www the monitor org Retrieved 2022 01 03 BBC News Northern Ireland Turning the pages on lost lives news bbc co uk Retrieved 2022 01 03 Dying Homeless Counting the deaths of homeless people across the UK The Bureau of Investigative Journalism en GB Retrieved 2022 01 03 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Casualty recording amp oldid 1211160791, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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