Watch a Jaw-Dropping
Visualization of Every Protest Since 1979
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Republished from ultraculture.org
By Jason Louv |
250 million protests worldwide, from 1979-2013, visualized in one time-lapse image
Penn
State doctoral candidate John Beieler has created a
time-lapse visualization of every protest on the planet since
1979. And it is jaw-dropping, and I mean that in a real way, not in a BS blogger-overhyping-this-incredible-amazing-thingway.
No, this is truly amazing, because what you’ll see is tiny blips
popping off here and there in the 1970s—a time we think of as highly
politically charged—and nearly eclipsing the world starting with the
late 90s anti-globalization
protests and the second Iraq War up
till our present moment.
I
would love to see this overlaid with time-lapse visualizations of other
factors: global warming, globalization, wars, food shortage, and the spread of
the Internet.
Also
fruitful: Comparing this data with media coverage and treatment of protest. Why
is it easy to think of the 1960s and 70s as a time of dissent and our time as a
more ordered, controlled and conformist period when the data so clearly shows
that there is no comparison in how much protest there is now compared
to then? Media distortion much?
Via Foreign Policy:
This
is what data from a world in turmoil looks like. The Global Database of Events,
Language, and Tone (GDELT) tracks news reports and codes them for 58 fields,
from where an incident took place to what sort of event it was (these maps look
at protests, violence, and changes in military and police posture) to ethnic
and religious affiliations, among other categories. The dataset has recorded
nearly 250 million events since 1979, according to its website, and is updated
daily…
The
map also shows some of the limits of Big Data — and trying to reduce major
global events to coded variables. Take, for example, the protests across the
United States in late 2011: Some are Occupy protests, others are Tea Party
protests, but the difference in the political identity of those demonstrations
isn’t reflected in the map. There are some strange things that happen when the
data are mapped, as well. A cursory glance at the map would suggest that Kansas
is the most restive state in the union, but really the frequent protests
popping up somewhere near Wichita are every media mention of a protest in the
United States that doesn’t specify a city (the same goes for that flickering
dot north of Mongolia in Middle-of-Nowhere, Russia).
1 comment:
Curious why Kansas had a consistently blinky light...did you notice that? What's going on in Kansas?
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