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WVU research reveals patterns behind armed conflicts, bolstering national security


West Virginia University
 research is strengthening national security by ensuring policymakers, military institutions, think tanks, academics and journalists have access to substantial, up-to-date information on international conflicts when they need it.

A $555,647 grant from the National Science Foundation supports the three-year expansion of the Correlates of War Project’s Militarized Interstate Dispute Data, led by Vito D’Orazio, associate professor of political science and data sciences at the WVU Eberly College of Arts and Sciences.

Two men—one in a gray long sleeve button down and the other in glasses and a short button down— sit at a table looking at a laptop

This article is republished from WVU Today — read the original article.