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第一次世界大战对人口结构的影响:人体测量学视角

The demographic impact of the First World War: an anthropometric perspective.

作者信息

Harris B

机构信息

Department of Sociology & Social Policy, University of Southampton, Highfield.

出版信息

Soc Hist Med. 1993 Dec;6(3):343-66. doi: 10.1093/shm/6.3.343.

Abstract

During the 1970s and 1980s Jay Winter published a series of highly influential articles on the demographic impact of the First World War, culminating in his study of The Great War and the British People in 1986. Winter argued that the war led to a dramatic improvement in average living standards, and that the survival chances of most sections of the civilian population improved more rapidly than they might have done if peace had been maintained. This paper seeks to test the strength of Winter's hypothesis in three main ways. Section I examines the arguments which Winter himself put forward to support his view that the war led to a systematic erosion of pre-war differentials in infant mortality. Section III utilizes evidence relating to children's heights to examine the extent to which the war led to improvements in children's 'nutritional status'. The paper's overall conclusion is that the war did not lead to any dramatic improvements in civilian health; the overall impression to be gained from an analysis of wartime health statistics is one of continuity rather than change.

摘要

在20世纪70年代和80年代,杰伊·温特发表了一系列关于第一次世界大战人口影响的极具影响力的文章,最终在1986年出版了他的著作《大战与英国人民》。温特认为,这场战争导致了平均生活水平的显著提高,而且如果维持和平,平民人口大多数群体的生存机会不会像在战争期间那样迅速改善。本文旨在通过三种主要方式来检验温特假说的说服力。第一部分审视了温特本人提出的论据,以支持他的观点,即这场战争导致了战前婴儿死亡率差异的系统性缩小。第三部分利用与儿童身高相关的证据,来考察这场战争在多大程度上带来了儿童“营养状况”的改善。本文的总体结论是,这场战争并没有给平民健康带来任何显著改善;从对战时健康统计数据的分析中获得的总体印象是连续性而非变化。

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