Abstract
South Africa’s Incident Registration Information System (IRIS) is a comprehensive, computerised database
maintained by the South African Police Service. In principle, it records all public order policing activity, including
all crowd incidents. While IRIS data is, potentially, a unique source for protest event analysis, it should be
approached with considerable care. In this article we aim to correct misunderstandings about the data
advanced by academics and in the media, and expose its misuse by police chiefs and politicians. In particular,
we argue that the incidents that IRIS reports are not protests, although protests can be found in the raw data.
This article is based, in part, on records of 156 230 incidents covering the period 1997–2013. We estimate that
only about 67 750 of these, 43% of the total, were protests. This may be the largest number of police‐recorded
protests released anywhere in the world.