Volume 23 - Article 2 | Pages 41–62  

The differential impact of mortality of American troops in the Iraq War: The non-metropolitan dimension

By Katherine J. Curtis, Collin Payne

Abstract

This study investigates the disproportionate impact of mortality among United States troops in Iraq on rural communities. We advance scholarly research and popular accounts that suggest a non-metropolitan disadvantage by disaggregating the risk of mortality according to the metropolitan status of their home county and by examining potential sources of variation, including enlistment, rank and race or ethnicity. Results show that troops from non-metropolitan areas have higher mortality after accounting for the disproportionate enlistment of non-metropolitan youth, and the non-metropolitan disadvantage generally persists across military branch and rank. Moreover, most of the differential is due to higher risks of mortality for non-metropolitan African American and Hispanic military personnel, compared to metropolitan enlistees of the same race or ethnicity.

Author’s Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

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The population-level impact of public-sector antiretroviral therapy rollout on adult mortality in rural Malawi
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The 'New Great Migration' of Blacks to the U.S. South: Estimating duration of residence in the absence of retrospective information
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