Statistics and Public Policy (Feb 2022)

Wartime Fatalities in the Nuclear Era

  • Lauren Ice,
  • James Scouras,
  • Edward Toton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2330443x.2022.2038744
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 0, no. 0
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Senior leaders in the US Department of Defense, as well as nuclear strategists and academics, have argued that the advent of nuclear weapons is associated with a dramatic decrease in wartime fatalities. This assessment is often supported by an evolving series of figures that show a marked drop in wartime fatalities as a percentage of world population after 1945 to levels well below those of the prior centuries. The goal of this paper is not to ascertain whether nuclear weapons are associated with or have led to a decrease in wartime fatalities, but rather to critique the supporting statistical evidence. We assess these wartime fatality figures and find that they are both irreproducible and misleading. We perform a more rigorous and traceable analysis and discover that post-1945 wartime fatalities as a percentage of world population are consistent with those of many other historical periods.

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