About This Project
About WarDeathData
An independent global conflict casualty database. We compile verified statistics from the world’s leading conflict monitoring organizations — for researchers, journalists, students and the public.
Our Mission
Why this site exists
WarDeathData.com was created in 2026 in response to a critical gap in public information: as global conflicts escalated, millions of people were searching for reliable, verified, centralized data on war casualties — and finding only scattered, inconsistent, or sensationalized reporting.
Our mission is simple: compile and present verified conflict casualty statistics in a clear, accessible, and academically responsible format. We do not take sides. We do not editorialize. We document.
Every number on this site represents a human being. We believe that making this data accessible — in historical context, with clear sourcing — serves the public interest, supports journalism, and contributes to global awareness of the true human cost of armed conflict.
What We Do
Our approach
Our Data Sources
Where the numbers come from
All statistics published on WarDeathData.com are sourced from internationally recognized conflict monitoring organizations and news agencies. We do not generate original data — we compile, verify and present data from these primary sources:
| Source | Type | Used For |
|---|---|---|
| ACLED | Independent Research | Event-level conflict data, fatality counts, 190+ countries |
| UN OCHA | UN Agency | Humanitarian casualty data, displacement figures |
| Reuters | News Agency | Breaking conflict updates, cross-reference verification |
| Al Jazeera | Broadcast News | Middle East conflict reporting, on-ground correspondents |
| BBC News | Broadcast News | Global conflict coverage, editorial verification |
| LiveUAMap | Mapping Platform | Ukraine war geospatial data, event tracking |
| Rawadari | Research Institute | Afghanistan conflict data |
| SOHR | Observatory | Syria conflict casualties |
Where sources conflict, we present the range of estimates and note the discrepancy. We err on the side of conservative estimates and always cite our sources transparently.
Editorial Policy
Our standards
- We wait for verification. For developing situations, we wait 24–48 hours for cross-source confirmation before publishing statistics.
- We show ranges when appropriate. When two reliable sources give different figures, we show both and explain why they differ.
- We distinguish types of casualties. Combatant deaths, civilian deaths, injuries, and displaced persons are tracked separately where data allows.
- We do not use graphic imagery. This is a data site. No photographs of casualties, violence, or destruction are published.
- We do not take political positions. Our data covers all parties in all conflicts equally. We have no editorial stance on any conflict.
- We correct errors promptly. If a figure is later revised by primary sources, we update it and note the change.
Educational Purpose
Who uses this data
WarDeathData.com serves a broad audience including:
- Students and researchers studying international relations, political science, and conflict studies
- Journalists seeking verified baseline statistics for news reporting
- Educators teaching history, current events, and global citizenship
- General public seeking reliable information during periods of global uncertainty
- Emergency preparedness professionals monitoring geopolitical risk indicators
- NGOs and humanitarian organizations tracking conflict impact
All data on this site is provided free of charge for educational and research purposes. We believe informed citizens make better decisions — and that accurate conflict data contributes to a more informed global public.
Contact Us
Get in touch
Reach the WarDeathData Team
For data corrections, source suggestions, media inquiries, or general questions about our methodology, please use our contact form or email us directly.
Email: contact@wardeathdata.com
Data corrections: data@wardeathdata.com
We aim to respond to all inquiries within 48 hours.