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Many have long suspected that when America takes up arms it is a
rich man's war, but a poor man's fight. Despite these concerns
about social inequality in military sacrifice, the hard data to
validate such claims has been kept out of public view. In The
Casualty Gap Douglas Kriner and Francis Shen renew the debate over
unequal sacrifice by bringing to light mountains of new evidence on
the inequality dimensions of American wartime casualties. They
demonstrate unequivocally that since the conclusion of World War II
communities at the lower end of the socioeconomic ladder have borne
a disproportionate share of the human costs of war. Moreover, they
show for the first time that when Americans are explicitly
confronted with evidence of this inequality, they become markedly
less supportive of the nation's war efforts.
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