南北战争对11个邦联州白人男性的人口影响:按州和选定年龄组的分析

David A. Swanson, R. Verdugo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近的研究表明,内战中冲突双方的男性死亡人数可能达到75万人,挑战了约62万人的传统数字。使用类似的数据和不同的方法,这项研究支持了关于南方各州的最新结果,我们发现大约有346,000名男性死亡,这个数字远远超过了长期以来公认的126,000人的估计。事实上,我们的死亡人数比最近的研究估计的死亡人数多8.8万人,死亡人数为25.8万人。在构建我们的数字时,我们估计了南北战争对1870年11个邦联州20-54岁白人男性的人口影响。我们的方法考虑了死亡率和人口迁移,但没有考虑生育率,因为我们研究的最小年龄是20岁。我们采用影响分析方法,从明尼苏达州人口中心收集的1850年、1860年和1870年人口普查的微观层面数据中提取数据。利用1850年和1860年的人口普查数据,我们按5个年龄组构建了白人男性的10年队列变化率(ccr),并将其应用于1860名10-14岁、15-19岁的白人男性。40-44岁的州按5岁年龄组,20-24岁,25-29岁…1870年是50-54。调查结果被汇总成20-54岁的单一年龄组,并与1870年同一年龄组的各州人口普查数据和所有11个州的人口普查数据进行比较。由于死亡率和移民的综合影响,内战对南部邦联所有11个州的白人男性的人口影响是通过从1870年实际(人口普查)数字(1,047,323)减去CCR方法得出的20-54岁年龄组1870年的预期数字(1,393,125)来估计的。差额是-345,802(-24.8%)。我们还发现了11个州在战争人口影响方面的绝对和相对差异,并讨论了这些结果。我们对邦联死亡人数的估计使双方的死亡总人数接近85万人,超过了美国自内战结束以来参加的每场战争和军事行动造成的美军死亡总人数。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Civil War’s Demographic Impact on White Males in the Eleven Confederate States: An Analysis by State and Selected Age Groups
Recent research has put the likely number of Civil War male deaths on both sides of the conflict at 750,000, challenging the conventional number of approximately 620,000. Using similar data and a different methodology, this study supports the newer results in terms of the Confederate states, where we find approximately 346,000 male deaths, a number that far exceeds a long-accepted estimate of 126,000. In fact, our number is about 88,000 more deaths than estimated by even more recent research, putting the number at 258,000. In constructing our number, we estimate the demographic impact of the Civil War on white males who were aged 20–54 in 1870 in the eleven Confederate States. Our approach takes into account both mortality and migration, but it excludes fertility because the youngest age we examine is 20 years. We apply an impact analysis approach using extracts from the micro-level data from the 1850, 1860, and 1870 census counts assembled by the Minnesota Population Center. Using the 1850 and 1860 census counts, we constructed ten-year Cohort Change Ratios (CCRs) for white males by five-year age groups and applied them to 1860 white males aged 10–14, 15–19 . . . 40–44 by state to project the expected number of white males by five-year age groups, 20–24, 25–29 . . . 50–54 for 1870. The results were aggregated into a single age group of 20–54 and compared with the 1870 census numbers for this same age group by state and for all eleven states combined. The Civil War’s demographic impact on white males in all eleven states of the Confederacy due to the combined effects of mortality and migration is estimated by subtracting the 1870 expected number (1,393,125) for age group 20–54 generated by the CCR method from the 1870 actual (census) number (1,047,323). The difference is –345,802 (–24.8%). We also find substantial absolute and relative variation across the eleven states in regard to the war’s demographic impact and discuss these results. Our estimate of Confederate deaths brings the total number of dead on both sides to nearly 850,000, which exceeds the total number of US military deaths resulting from every war and military action in which the United States has participated since the Civil War’s end.
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