Child mortality during the Spanish Civil War. Estimated geographical impact based on the 1940 Census
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5477/cis/reis.127.55Keywords:
Child Mortality, 1940 Census, Retrospective Information, Spanish Civil War, SpainAbstract
Following a method proposed by W. Brass, this paper uses 1940 Spanish census data on retrospective fertility (based on questions addressed to married women about numbers of children born alive and surviving children at the time of the census) to estimate the survival levels of women?s descendants at different ages and, therefore, child mortality up to the age of 15. The results show that the Spanish Civil War worsened child survival in practically all Spanish provinces, especially those of Andalusia and Levante, whereas the least affected provinces were those of Catalonia and the Northern Meseta, in spite of the fact that these two regions had had opposite experiences of child mortality before the war, with low levels in the former and high ones in the latter. This would seem to indicate that, although a region?s level of development should be inversely related to its population?s vulnerability to unfavourable situations, the previous demographic situation does not seem to significantly influence child mortality during the war.
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