ITT Publications & Press

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2016


Introducing the ITT Data” (an article by Courtenay R. Conrad and Will H. Moore) was included in the American Political Science Association’s Comparative Politics Newsletter.


“How Do We Count Victims of Torture?” (a podcast by Will H. Moore) was posted on the The Rights Track.


2015


Dirty Hands: Government Torture and Terrorism” (an article by Ursula Daxecker) was published at the Journal of Conflict Resolution.


2014


Most Countries Are Against Torture -- But Most Have Also Been Accused of It” (an article by Rick Noack) was posted on The Washington Post.


“Dirty Hands: Government Torture and Terrorism” (by Ursula Daxecker) was presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association.


Mapping Torture Allegations Using ITT” (a blog post by K. Chad Clay) was posted on The Quantitative Peace.


StateRepression.com highlighted ITT as one of its featured data sets. 


2013


Why Democracy Does Not Always Improve Human Rights” (a brief by Courtenay R. Conrad) was posted on the Scholar’s Strategy Network.


Democratic Elections Deter Torture, Right?” (a blog post by Will H. Moore) was posted on Political Violence @ a Glance.


Is Turkey Burning? The Domestic Democratic Peace, Turkish Contention, and New York Times Coverage” (a blog post by Christian Davenport) was posted on Political Violence @ a Glance.


Torture Allegations as Events Data: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture (ITT) Specific Allegation Data” (by Courtenay R. Conrad, Jillienne Haglund and Will H. Moore) is forthcoming at the Journal of Peace Research.


Political Institutions, Plausible Deniability, and the Use of Stealth Torture” (by Courtenay R. Conrad and Will H. Moore) was presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association and the Human Rights Seminar at Columbia University.


2012


The Monkey Cage mentioned ITT as an example of what NSF-funded projects have taught us about national security issues.


Political Institutions, Plausible Deniability, and the Use of Stealth Torture” (by Courtenay R. Conrad and Will H. Moore) was presented at the International Politics of Autocracies Workshop at Rice University and the Visions in Methodology (VIM) Workshop at Pennsylvania State University.


Ausnahmezustand: Citizenship and the Protection of Physical Integrity Rights” (by Peter Haschke) was presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association.


Disaggregating Torture Allegations: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture (ITT) Country-Year (CY) Data” (by Courtenay R. Conrad, Jillienne Haglund, and Will H. Moore) is forthcoming at International Studies Perspectives.


2011


Repression or Not: Physical Integrity Violations in Democracies” (by Peter Haschke) was presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association.


“Who Tortures the Terrorists?” (by Courtenay R. Conrad, Justin Conrad, James A. Piazza, and James Igoe Walsh) was presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association and the Annual Meeting of the Peace Science Association.

   

Amnesty International’s Torture Allegations: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture (ITT)  Country-Year (CY) Data” (by Courtenay R. Conrad, Jillienne Haglund, and Will H. Moore) was presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association.


What Stops the Torture? And Who Tortures” (a blog post by Erik Voeten) was posted on The Monkey Cage.


2010

   

Which Government Agencies Torture? Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture (ITT) Data” (by Courtenay R. Conrad and Will H. Moore) was presented at the Annual Meeting of the Peace Science Society.


“Physical Integrity Violations and Human Rights” (by James A. Piazza and James Igoe Walsh) discusses ITT as a model for the development of more fine-grained data collection on human rights.


2009


In “The Torture Project,” FSU’s College of Social Sciences and Public Policy highlighted the ITT project for the quality of its undergraduate research assistants.