{"id":89201,"date":"2023-05-18T05:52:29","date_gmt":"2023-05-18T05:52:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/airwars.org\/?post_type=news_and_analysis&p=89201"},"modified":"2023-05-18T10:07:52","modified_gmt":"2023-05-18T10:07:52","slug":"battle-of-kharkiv-interactive-civilian-harm-database-launched","status":"publish","type":"news_and_analysis","link":"https:\/\/airwars.org\/news\/battle-of-kharkiv-interactive-civilian-harm-database-launched\/","title":{"rendered":"Battle of Kharkiv interactive civilian harm database launched"},"content":{"rendered":"
A mother killed cradling her child in her arms, an elderly woman hit by shrapnel while feeding stray cats, a family buried under rubble for weeks – these are among hundreds of devastating human stories recorded in Airwars’ new Ukraine research portal<\/a>, among the most in-depth public documentation of the war’s human impact to date.<\/p>\n Over nine months, Airwars’ new Ukraine research team documented every publicly reported civilian harm allegation from explosive weapons in the ‘Battle of Kharkiv,’ which lasted from the Russian invasion on February 24th until May 13th 2022.<\/p>\n The data can be explored via Airwars\u2019 interactive mapping<\/a>,\u00a0civilian harm database<\/a> and urban heat map.<\/a> Our findings are accessible through our full research brief here<\/a> along with a methodology note<\/a>. The project was designed as a sample case for building a publicly accessible database of allegations of open-source civilian harm in Ukraine. The figures do not claim to be exhaustive.<\/p>\n Among the key findings were:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n\n
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