Seshat: Global history dataset 2011-2016

Whitehouse, Harvey and Turchin, Peter and Francois, Pieter and Currie, Thomas and Feeney, Kevin (2020). Seshat: Global history dataset 2011-2016. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Archive. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-852850

Some of the greatest atrocities have been caused by groups defending or advancing their political aspirations and sacred values. In order to comprehend and address the wanton violence of war, terrorism and genocide, it is necessary to understand the forces that bind and drive human groups.

This five year programme of research investigates one of the most powerful mechanisms by which groups may be formed, inspired, and coordinated: ritual. Studying how children learn the rituals of their communities will shed light on the various ways in which rituals promote social cohesion within the group and distrust of groups with different ritual traditions.

Qualitative field research and controlled psychological experiments will be conducted in a number of troubled regions (including Northern Ireland, the Middle East, Nepal, and Colombia) to explore the effects of ritual participation on ingroup cohesion and outgroup hostility in both general populations and armed groups. New databases will be constructed to explore the relationship between ritual, resource extraction patterns, and group structure and scale over the millennia. These interdisciplinary projects will be undertaken by international teams of anthropologists, psychologists, historians, archaeologists, and evolutionary theorists.

Data description (abstract)

The Seshat: Global History dataset contains both machine-readable and textual historical and archaeological data from across the globe and for the past 10,000 years. The data is especially rich on variables pertaining to social complexity, ritual and warfare.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Whitehouse Harvey University of Oxford
Turchin Peter University of Connecticut
Francois Pieter University of Oxford
Currie Thomas University of Exeter
Feeney Kevin Trinity College Dublin
Sponsors: Economic and Social Research Council
Grant reference: ES/I005455/1
Topic classification: History
Society and culture
Keywords: history, evolution, social complexity
Project title: Ritual, Community, and Conflict
Grant holders: Harvey Whitehouse
Project dates:
FromTo
1 June 201131 May 2017
Date published: 14 May 2020 12:45
Last modified: 18 Sep 2020 12:49

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