Litteratur |
American Military Deaths in Afghanistan, and the Communities
from Which These Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, and Marines Came. /
Michael Zweig, Michael Porter, and Yuxiang Huang. Center for Study
of Working Class Life, 2011. - 46 s.
American War and
Military Operations Casualties : Lists and Statistics. /
Hannah Fischer ; Kim Klarman ; Mari-Jana “M-J”
Oboroceanu. - Washington : CRS, 2007. - 28 s.
Annual Report on Civilian Casualties in Connection With United
States Military Operations : Submitted pursuant to Section 1057
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018.
Breve elogio y ceñida relación de la vida,
enfermedad y muerte del serenissimo señor Francisco
Farnesio, primero de este nombre y septimo duque de Parma,
Placencia y Castro, &c., padre de la reyna na. sa. (que dios
guarde) : y de las esequias, que de orden de su magestaed el
Rey nuestro señor (dios le guarde) se celebraron en el Real
Convento de la Encarnacion de esta Corte. - En Madrid : En la
Imprenta de Musica, por Miguèl de Rèzola, 1728. - 264
s.
- http://archive.org/details/breveelogioyceni00valg
'Omfatter ligtale af Antonio Maria Piscatori i latin og spansk i
oversættelse af Geronimo Val (hver med separat titelblad), og
flere sonetter i slutningen.'
The US Cemetery's Gravesite Accountability Task Force: Report to
Congress on Implementation of Army Directive on Army National
Cemeteries Program, 2011. - 45 s. -
http://usarmy.vo.llnwd.net/e2/c/downloads/220510.pdf
Chesser,
Susan G.: Afghanistan Casualties: Military Forces and
Civilians. Congressional Research Service, July 12, 2010.
CRS: Recent Trends in Active-Duty Military Deaths, 2019.
Summary of Deaths
Since 2006—five years after the start of major combat
operations in Afghanistan and three years after the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq—a total of 16,652 active-duty personnel and
mobilized reservists have died while serving in the U.S. armed
forces. Seventy-three percent of these casualties occurred under
circumstances unrelated to war, a category classified in this
report as Non-Overseas Contingency Operations, or Non- OCO.
Twenty-seven percent have died while serving in OCO
operations—primarily within the territory of Iraq and
Afghanistan—during periods of active combat operations. OCO
operations related to Afghanistan primarily include Enduring
Freedom and Freedom’s Sentinel. For Iraq, OCO operations
include Iraqi Freedom, New Dawn, and Inherent Resolve. Figure 1
summarizes all service deaths since 2006.
Due to quality issues with pre-2006 data, earlier years have been
excluded from this analysis.
CRS: Recent Trends in Active-Duty Military Deaths, 2018.
Since 2006—five years after the start of major combat
operations in Afghanistan and three years after the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq—a total of 15,851 active-duty personnel and
mobilized reservists have died while serving in the U.S. armed
forces. Seventy-two percent of these casualties occurred under
circumstances unrelated to war, a category classified in this
report as Non-Overseas Contingency Operations, or Non- OCO.
Twenty-eight percent have died while serving in OCO
operations—primarily within the territory of Iraq and
Afghanistan—during periods of active combat operations. OCO
operations related to Afghanistan primarily include Enduring
Freedom and Freedom’s Sentinel. For Iraq, OCO operations
include Iraqi Freedom, New Dawn, and Inherent Resolve.
Damkjær, Ole: Tabstallene i Irak er eskaleret
voldsomt. I: Berlingske Tidende, 10/07/2006.
Darkening Horizons : Global Violent Deaths Scenarios,
2018–30. / : Gergely Hideg and Anna Alvazzi del Frate. The
Small Arms Survey, 2019.
New Small Arms Survey data: significant rise in global violent
deaths in 2017
GENEVA—The year 2017 saw the second highest annual rate of
global violent deaths in the period 2004– 17, according to
new data from the Small Arms Survey.
In 2017, 589,000 people—including 96,000 women and
girls—lost their lives due to lethal violence. This
corresponds to a rate of 7.80 violent deaths per 100,000
population, the second highest since 2004. The same figure for 2016
was 560,000 people, or 7.56 deaths per 100,000 population. The data
for 2017 compared to 2016 was also the third-largest annual change
during the period 2004–17. Overall, the proportion of female
victims of lethal violence remained stable at 16%.
This increase in the number of global violent deaths is primarily
due to a rise in homicides, ie: non-conflict deaths.
‘In 2017, some 403,000 people were victims of intentional
homicides, compared to 106,000 who were killed as a result of war
or other conflicts,’ noted Gergely Hideg, co-author of the
Small Arms Survey Briefing Paper Darkening Horizons: Global Violent
Deaths Scenarios, 2018–30 that summarizes the new data.
Døden i barndommen : spædbørnsdødelighed og
moderniseringsprocesser i Danmark 1800 til 1920. / : Anne Løkke. Gyldendal, 1998.
Feuerback, Ludwig: Gedanken über Tod und Unsterblichkeit /
Tanker over døden og udødeligheden. 1836.
Holbein, Hans; Hans Lützelburger: The Dance of
Death.
- London ; New York : G. Bell & Sons, 1892. - 144 s.
http://www.archive.org/details/danceofdeath00holb
Leitenberg, Milton: Deaths in
Wars and Conflicts in the 20th Century.
Research : Fifty years of violent war deaths from Vietnam to
Bosnia : analysis of data from the world health survey
programme / Ziad Obermeyer, research scientist, Christopher J L
Murray, institute director, Emmanuela Gakidou, associate
professor.
BMJ 2008;336:1482-1486 (28 June), doi:10.1136/bmj.a137 (published
19 June 2008)
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/bmj.a137
Vangkilde, Jesper: Tapre Emily kom hjem i en ligpose.
I: Politiken, 10/03/2006.