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Gendered Actors

Detailed explanation of ACLED's gender-focused data coverage and the types of events included.

Uses and limitations of ACLED data

Published on: 26 June 2023 | Last updated: 7 May 2024

About ACLED’s gendered coverage

When did ACLED introduce a gendered component to coverage, and how has this evolved over time?

In May 2019, ACLED first introduced gendered ‘Associated Actors’ in the data in May 2019 along with an accompanying report, in partnership with the Robert Strauss Center for International Security and Law at the University of Texas at Austin. This initial launch introduced ‘Women’ as an ‘Associated Actor’ in ACLED data, allowing users to capture Political Violence Targeting Women and Demonstrations Featuring Women across four geographic regions (more on those below). Since the end of the project with the Strauss Center, ACLED coverage has expanded to include all regions of the world, in line with ACLED’s concurrent geographic expansions. In December 2021, ACLED introduced stylized tags capturing the identity types of targeted women, specifically “women in politics,” alongside an accompanying report, allowing users to capture Political Violence Targeting Women in Politics (more on that below).

What does Political Violence Targeting Women mean?

Women are coded as the main victims only in events when the victim(s) are composed entirely of women/girls, majority women/girls, or if the primary target was a woman/girl (e.g. a woman politician attacked alongside two men bodyguards). These events refer to cases of direct targeting, and are coded under the ‘Violence against civilians’ event type with ‘Attack’, ‘Abduction/forced disappearance’, or ‘Sexual violence’ sub-event type, or under the ‘Riots’ event type with the ‘Mob violence’ sub-event type. Events in which women are killed alongside men, for example, are not categorized as such.

In cases of women being targeted through ‘Explosions/Remote violence’, when targeting has the potential of being more random, this rule is applied more conservatively. Therefore, cases such as an airstrike killing three women and one man would not be coded as having targeted women. However, such events where the targeting is clearly directed at women/girls are included (e.g. a remote explosive targeting a girls’ school, or a grenade thrown at a woman politician).

What does Political Violence Targeting Women in Politics mean?

This refers to events of Political Violence Targeting Women in which ‘women in politics’ are specifically targeted. Women in politics refers to women who are directly or indirectly engaging in political processes: women candidates for office, politicians, political party supporters, voters, government officials, activists/human rights defenders/social leaders, and protesters.

What does Demonstrations Featuring Women mean?

Demonstrations Featuring Women are those where demonstrators are made up entirely by women or a majority of women (e.g. a gathering of mothers of prisoners), a women’s group (e.g. Women of Zimbabwe Arise), or are organized around women’s rights or issues specifically (e.g. women’s reproductive rights, or policies around women’s clothing). Events in which women are simply demonstrating alongside men on other issues, such as labor disputes, are not categorized as such.

Do these data capture all types of violence that women face?

No. Only public political violence is included. Domestic, interpersonal, or intimate partner violence is excluded. Additionally, only physical violence (or an attempt at physical violence, such as a failed assassination attempt) is included; this includes sexual violence (for more, see this methodology primer). Threats of physical violence or intimidation are excluded (such as psycho-social violence, or online violence). The totality of all violence women face stretches far beyond the subset of violence captured in the data here.

Does ‘Political violence’ refer to people in politics?

Not necessarily. ACLED defines ‘Political violence’ as “the use of force by a group with a political purpose or motivation” (see the ACLED Codebook). While this can include violence that involves or targets those in politics — like politicians — it does not always nor need to involve such agents.

Does ACLED disaggregate events by gender?

No. This is not a gender disaggregation of the ACLED dataset. It should not be assumed that events in which women are not coded as an ‘Associated Actor’ did not involve women; those can be events in which reports do not note the gender of the victim(s), or may be events in which women were killed alongside men or women were simply demonstrating alongside men.

The scope of the data

Women can be perpetrators of violence too, and not just victims. Is this captured in these data?

No. Within this initiative, only political violence in which women are targeted is included. Perpetrators of violence that involve women, such as the Free Women’s Units of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, are not coded with an ‘Associated Actor’ denoting Women as part of this coding structure. This means that suicide bombings by women, for example, are not included as Political Violence Targeting Women; in such an example, a suicide bomber’s targets are what determine whether an attack is categorized as such or not.

Can these data help me understand how much violence women face?

No. The data here capture political violence targeting women — which is not equivalent to all political violence against women. For example, an airstrike on a town may kill both men and women; the women in this case were not specifically targeted over the men, but rather civilians more generally were targeted. Such a case would not be specifically categorized as Political violence Targeting Women here. A number of other types of violence that women face — such as private, domestic, interpersonal, or intimate partner violence, as well as criminal violence, and non-physical violence (e.g. psycho-social, threats, intimidation, etc.) — are also not included here (for more, see below). Furthermore, it is important to note that underreporting of violence targeting women by victims is common due to backlash or normative concerns; this should be considered when drawing conclusions from the data. As is the same for all datasets, coverage within the ACLED dataset is limited to what has been reported in some capacity. As such, these data should not be used to understand all violence women face; that is a much larger set of information. 

Can these data tell me how many women have been targeted?

No. ACLED is an event-based dataset, meaning that each entry in the dataset is an ‘event’; events are denoted by the involvement of designated actors, occurring in a specific named location and on a specific day. When recording Political Violence Targeting Women, a single event can involve one or many victims: three women killed by a soldier in a specific town on a certain day is collected as a single event; a girls’ school attacked in a specific town on a certain day is coded the same way. The number of events should, therefore, not be conflated with the number of victims – in the same way that the number of violent events in the ACLED dataset should not be conflated with the number of fatalities. These capture different trends.

The targets of violence

Who can the targets of Political Violence Targeting Women be?

Women (including trans women1, when reported) and girls are included as victims. This means that women in politics are coded, as are other categories of women (for more on these categories, see below). Women are coded as an ‘Associated Actor’ when their gender is a salient identity in their targeting. Gender will not be the salient identity in every instance of political violence against women. Salient identities are not fixed in time and space; the intersectional nature of identities means that different aspects of one’s identity may be salient at different times, places, and contexts.

What about men? Are they included as an ‘Associated Actor’ when they are targeted?

Men are included as an ‘Associated Actor’ when their gender is a salient identity in their targeting — this means when they are the victims of sexual violence specifically and can be included as ‘Associated Actor’ in those events.

Do these data capture political violence targeting women in politics?

Political Violence Targeting Women (PVTW) is not limited to just women in politics. All public and political physical violence targeting women is included, regardless of the specific occupation of the victim. However, the subset of events referred to as Political Violence Targeting Women in Politics (PVTWIP) specifically refers to the subset of PVTW that targets women in politics. This includes women candidates for office, politicians, political party supporters, voters, government officials, advocates/human rights defenders/social leaders, and protesters. Users can identify the relevant events in which such women are targeted by using stylized tags — such as “women targeted: politicians” — which appear in the ‘Tags’ column of an event. These categories/tags are not mutually exclusive; when multiple identity categories apply, all relevant tags will be included. For example, if a political party supporter is attacked while casting her vote, the event will be tagged as “women targeted: political party supporters; women targeted: voters.” A list of these seven identity types, their definitions, and the format of the stylized tag in the ‘Tags’ column in the data can be found below:

  • Candidates for office “women targeted: candidates for office”
    • Women who are running for a publicly elected government position; this position can be in local, regional, or national government and includes, but is not limited to, incumbent candidates.
  • Politicians “women targeted: politicians”
    • Women who currently serve in an elected position in government, regardless of whether that government is at the local, regional, or national level.
  • Political party supporters “women targeted: political party supporters”
    • Women who contribute to, endorse, and/or act in support of a political party or candidate that extends outside of voting, via membership, participation in party events, monetary donations, or other forms of support. This also includes women who refuse to act, endorse, or support a specific political party or candidate, regardless of whether or not their preferred party or candidate is listed.
  • Voters “women targeted: voters”
    • Women who are actively participating in, have actively participated in, or attempt to actively participate in local, state/regional, and/or national elections or referendums. Active participation refers specifically to registering to vote or casting a ballot in an election.
  • Government officials “women targeted: government officials”
    • Women who work for the local, regional, or national government in a non-partisan capacity. This includes public/civil servants, local authorities, or non-partisan political appointments, such as judges. This also includes women who work to support the proper functioning of elections; electoral assistance groups include independent and/or non-partisan poll workers or poll monitors.
  • Activists/human rights defenders/social leaders “women targeted: activists/human rights defenders/social leaders”
    • Women who peacefully advocate for a specific social cause and/or actively promote the expansion or protection of human rights. These rights can include women’s rights, civic rights, environmental rights, and more. This also includes social leaders, who are often prominent, local activists known for their community advocacy.
  • Protesters “women targeted: protesters”
    • This tag is applied to peaceful Demonstrations Featuring Women events that are targeted with excessive force. Due to the fact that men also participate in women’s rights protests and because reporting on the gender of protesters is often limited, men may be included among the victims of excessive force against demonstrations featuring women. Regardless, the excessive force against the demonstration is still assumed to target women.

Coverage in both time and space

What countries and regions are covered in these data?

All countries covered by ACLED are included (please reference ACLED’s coverage list for the latest information).

Can I make regional comparisons of Political Violence Targeting Women’ or Demonstrations Featuring Women?

Yes, with certain caveats. It is important to note that ACLED’s coverage of regions over time is not uniform. ACLED began as an African data project and, therefore, data covering the African continent span back the farthest. Geographic expansions since then extend coverage for new regions back in time only to a certain point, as resources allow. It is imperative to keep this in mind when reviewing trends across regions over time so as not to introduce an artificial spike into the data with the introduction of new regions into the timeline (please refer to ACLED’s coverage list for further information). It is important for the user to ensure they are comparing countries across periods of time that are equally covered (e.g. do not compare trends from 1997 to the present between Burundi, where coverage extends back to 1997, and Syria, where coverage extends back to 2017).

Data accessibility

How do I determine which ACLED events are Political Violence Targeting Women, or Demonstrations Featuring Women, or Political Violence Targeting Women in Politics?

Demonstrations Featuring Women are events marked as ‘Demonstrations’ in the ‘Disorder type’ column, denoted with ‘Women (Country)’ in the ‘Associated Actor 1’ or ‘Associated Actor 2’ column. Political Violence Targeting Women events are events with ‘Political violence’ in the ‘Disorder type’ column, denoted with ‘Women (Country)’ as an ‘Associated Actor 1’ or ‘Associated Actor 2.’ Please note that the ‘Excessive force against protesters’ events feature in both ‘Political violence’ and ‘Demonstrations’ disorder types.

How can I access these data?

These new data are publicly accessible via ACLED’s website — both through the data export tool as well as via a curated data file — and also via the API on a weekly basis, allowing users to monitor these trends in near-real-time for analysis, programming, early warning, advocacy, and more. For more on accessibility and relevant stipulations, please see ACLED’s Terms of Use & Attribution Policy. To access the data, users must to first register for a free account; steps are spelled out in this guide.

How often are data updated?

These new data are updated on a weekly basis in conjunction with ACLED’s weekly data release schedule (with new data published every Monday/Tuesday covering the Saturday through Friday prior). ACLED works to maintain a ‘living dataset,’ meaning that in addition to weekly releases of new data covering the week prior, historic supplementation of past time periods is also ongoing with information from new sources, targeted research, and new partnerships being integrated.

How do I cite these data?

Please see ACLED’s Terms of Use & Attribution Policy.

Other

How can I help improve ACLED’s coverage of political violence targeting women and/or demonstrations featuring women?

If you are an organization collecting information on political violence targeting women, including women in politics, or demonstrations featuring women, and are interested in a partnership with ACLED to help extend coverage of these threats to women further, please reach out to us at [email protected].

Footnotes

  1. 1

    ACLED includes an LGBTQ+ identity category, when salient and reported, along the same lines outlined here.

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