War and infant mortality rates

IF 1 2区 社会学 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Journal of Human Rights Pub Date : 2022-10-04 DOI:10.1080/14754835.2022.2122786
M. Abouharb
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Abstract

Abstract War represents one of the gravest threats to the right to health. A range of international human rights covenants have enumerated the rights of both adults and children to lead full healthy lives, free from the dangers of war. Yet we know remarkably little about how war systematically affects children’s rights to health. We have limited knowledge about if different types of conflict—major interstate and major civil wars—have similar or different consequences for children’s health. This article examines the immediate and cumulative links of major interstate and major civil wars with infant mortality rates, a key measure of children’s health. The article employs generalized least squares regression with two-way fixed effects over the 1950–2007 period. The core results indicate that major civil and major interstate wars substantively violate children’s and infants’ rights to health. States that spent the most amount of time involved in major interstate wars were associated with the worst overall increases in infant mortality rates.
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战争和婴儿死亡率
战争是对健康权的最严重威胁之一。一系列国际人权公约列举了成人和儿童在不受战争危险的情况下过完全健康生活的权利。然而,对于战争如何系统性地影响儿童的健康权,我们知之甚少。对于不同类型的冲突——主要的国家间冲突和主要的内战——对儿童健康的影响是相似的还是不同的,我们所知有限。本文考察了主要州际战争和主要内战与婴儿死亡率(儿童健康的一项关键指标)之间的直接和累积联系。本文采用广义最小二乘回归,在1950-2007年期间具有双向固定效应。核心结果表明,重大内战和重大国家间战争实质上侵犯了儿童和婴儿的健康权。在主要的国家间战争中花费最多时间的国家,其婴儿死亡率的总体增长最为严重。
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CiteScore
3.10
自引率
21.10%
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0
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