Event Count Models for International Relations: Generalizations and Applications
Gary King. 1989.
"Event Count Models for International Relations: Generalizations and Applications".
International Studies Quarterly, 33, Pp. 123–147.

Abstract
International relations theorists tend to think in terms of continuous processes. Yet we observe only discrete events, such as wars or alliances, and summarize them in terms of the frequency of occurrence. As such, most empirical analyses in international relations are based on event count variables. Unfortunately, analysts have generally relied on statistical techniques that were designed for continuous data. This mismatch between theory and method has caused bias, inefficiency, and numerous inconsistencies in both theoretical arguments and empirical findings throughout the literature. This article develops a much more powerful approach to modeling and statistical analysis based explicity on estimating continuous processes from observed event counts. To demonstrate this class of models, I present several new statistical techniques developed for and applied to different areas of international relations. These include the influence of international alliances on the outbreak of war, the contagious process of multilateral economic sanctions, and reciprocity in superpower conflict. I also show how one can extract considerably more information from existing data and relate substantive theory to empirical analyses more explicitly with this approach.
See Also
- [Paper] A Correction for an Underdispersed Event Count Probability Distribution (1995)
- [Paper] A Seemingly Unrelated Poisson Regression Model (1989)
- [Book] Demographic Forecasting (2008)
- [Paper] Presidential Appointments to the Supreme Court: Adding Systematic Explanation to Probabilistic Description (1987)
- [Paper] Statistical Models for Political Science Event Counts: Bias in Conventional Procedures and Evidence for The Exponential Poisson Regression Model (1988)
- [Paper] The Generalization in the Generalized Event Count Model, With Comments on Achen, Amato, and Londregan (1996)
- [Book] Unifying Political Methodology: The Likelihood Theory of Statistical Inference (1998)
- [Paper] Variance Specification in Event Count Models: From Restrictive Assumptions to a Generalized Estimator (1989)