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El Salvador 1991 – Who Did What To Whom?
Primer to Inform Discussions about Bail Reform
Quantifying Police Misconduct in Louisiana
Scanning Documents to Uncover Police Violence
Our Thoughts on the Violence in Charlottesville
HRDAG Adds Three New Board Members
Celebrating our First Anniversary and Welcoming Our Newest Board Member
Welcoming a New Board Member
Searching for Trends: Analyzing Patterns in Conflict Violence Data
Megan Price and Anita Gohdes (2014). Searching for Trends: Analyzing Patterns in Conflict Violence Data. Political Violence @ a Glance. © 2014 PV@G.
Using Machine Learning to Help Human Rights Investigators Sift Massive Datasets
About HRDAG
Selection Bias and the Statistical Patterns of Mortality in Conflict.
Megan Price and Patrick Ball. 2015. Statistical Journal of the IAOS 31: 263–272. doi: 10.3233/SJI-150899. © IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved. Creative Commons BY-NC-SA.
Reflections: The G in HRDAG is the Real Fuel
Where Stats and Rights Thrive Together
Patrick Ball wins the Karl E. Peace Award
Palantir Has Secretly Been Using New Orleans to Test Its Predictive Policing Technology
One of the researchers, a Michigan State PhD candidate named William Isaac, had not previously heard of New Orleans’ partnership with Palantir, but he recognized the data-mapping model at the heart of the program. “I think the data they’re using, there are serious questions about its predictive power. We’ve seen very little about its ability to forecast violent crime,” Isaac said.
Celebrating Women in Statistics
In her work on statistical issues in criminal justice, Lum has studied uses of predictive policing—machine learning models to predict who will commit future crime or where it will occur. In her work, she has demonstrated that if the training data encodes historical patterns of racially disparate enforcement, predictions from software trained with this data will reinforce and—in some cases—amplify this bias. She also currently works on statistical issues related to criminal “risk assessment” models used to inform judicial decision-making. As part of this thread, she has developed statistical methods for removing sensitive information from training data, guaranteeing “fair” predictions with respect to sensitive variables such as race and gender. Lum is active in the fairness, accountability, and transparency (FAT) community and serves on the steering committee of FAT, a conference that brings together researchers and practitioners interested in fairness, accountability, and transparency in socio-technical systems.
Estimating the Number of SARS-CoV-2 Infections and the Impact of Mitigation Policies
The Statistics of Genocide
Patrick Ball and Megan Price (2018). The Statistics of Genocide. Chance (special issue). February 2018. © 2018 CHANCE.