A jury consisting of Jon Hovi (University of Oslo), Sara McLaughlin Mitchell (University of Iowa) and Gerald Schneider (University of Konstanz) has awarded the first JPR Article of the Year Award to Philip Verwimp of the Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, and the Households in Conflict Network. In its assessment of all research articles published in volume 43 of JPR, the jury paid attention to theoretical rigour, methodological sophistication and substantive relevance. According to the jury, the prize-winning article ‘Machetes and Firearms: The Organization of Massacres in Rwanda’, Journal of Peace Research 43(1): 5–22, is a most innovative piece of work. It systematically examines how the perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide organized the massacres. The author draws on established theories and makes careful use of a new dataset that contains information on 59,000 victims. More broadly, the article is an example of a new generation of conflict studies that move the analytical focus from the level of the state or even state system down to the individual actor, be it a victim or a perpetrator of political violence.
Philip Verwimp obtained his doctoral degree from the University of Leuven in 2003 and has been a lecturer at the Institute of Social Studies since 2005. The award is USD 1,000.
Honourable mention goes to the runners-up: Valentin L. Krustev, ‘Interdependence and the Duration of Militarized Conflict’, JPR 43(3): 243–260; and Galia Press-Barnathan, ‘The Neglected Dimension of Commercial Liberalism: Economic Cooperation and Transition to Peace’, JPR 43(3): 261–278.
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Article of the year 2011
The Nils Petter Gleditsch JPR Article of the Year Award, 2011, goes to Cullen S. Hendrix and Sarah M. Glaser
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Article of the year 2010
JPR Article of the Year Award, 2010, goes to Michael D Ward, Brian D Greenhill & Kristin M Bakke
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Article of the year 2009
The fourth JPR Article of the Year Award, for 2009, goes to Stathis N. Kalyvas & Matthew Adam Kocher for ‘The Dynamics of Violence in Vietnam: An Analysis of the Hamlet Evaluation System (HES)’, Journal of Peace Research 46(3): 335-355.
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Article of the year 2008
The third JPR Article of the Year Award goes to Neil F. Johnson, Michael Spagat, Sean Gourley, Jukka-Pekka Onnela & Gesine Reinert for ‘Bias in Epidemiological Studies of Conflict Mortality’, Journal of Peace Research 45(5): 653–663.
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Article of the year 2007
The second JPR Article of the Year Award goes to Victor Asal & Kyle Beardsley for ‘Proliferation and International Crisis Behavior’, Journal of Peace Research 44(2): 139–155.
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Article of the year 2006
The first JPR Article of the Year Award goes to Philip Verwimp for ‘Machetes and Firearms: The Organization of Massacres in Rwanda’, Journal of Peace Research 43(1): 5–22.
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