Skip to main content
DA / EN
Violence

Life in a violent country can be years shorter and less predictable

How long people live in violent countries is less predictable and life expectancy for young people can be as much as 14 years shorter compared to peaceful countries, according to a new study led by University of Southern Denmark and Oxford University.

The study reveals a direct link between the uncertainty of living in a violent setting, even for those not directly involved in the violence, and a ‘double burden’ of shorter and less predictable lives.

According to the research, violent deaths are responsible for a high proportion of the differences in lifetime uncertainty between violent and peaceful countries.

But, the study says:

‘The impact of violence on mortality goes beyond cutting lives short. When lives are routinely lost to violence, those left behind face uncertainty as to who will be next.’

Meet the resercher

José Manuel Aburto is an Assistant Professor at the Interdisciplinary Centre on Population Dynamics. His research focuses on the development of methodology to understand how populations and individuals survive to higher ages.

CONTACT

Lifetime uncertainty should not be overlooked when analysing changes in mortality patterns

José Manuel Aburto, assistant professor and lead author at the report

Lead author Dr José Manuel Aburto from Interdisciplinary Centre on Population Dynamics, University of Southern Denmark and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine adds:

- What we found most striking is that lifetime uncertainty has a greater association with violence than life expectancy. Lifetime uncertainty therefore should not be overlooked when analysing changes in mortality patterns.

Using mortality data from 162 countries, and the Internal Peace Index between 2008-2017, the study shows the most violent countries are also those with the highest lifetime uncertainty.

Violence also affects those not directly involved

In the Middle East, conflict-related deaths at young ages are the biggest contributor to this, while in Latin America, a similar pattern results from homicides and interpersonal violence. 

But lifetime uncertainty was ‘remarkably low’ between 2008-2017, in most Northern and Southern European countries with Denmark and other Scandinavian countries scoring the best. Although Europe has been the most peaceful region over the period, the Russian invasion of Ukraine will impact this.

In high-income countries, reduced cancer mortality has helped to reduce lifetime uncertainty recently. But in the most violent societies, lifetime uncertainty is even experienced by those not directly involved in violence. 

What we found most striking is that lifetime uncertainty has a greater association with violence than life expectancy

José Manuel Aburto, assistant professor and lead author at the report

The report states:

‘Poverty-insecurity-violence cycles magnify pre-existing structural patterns of disadvantage for women and fundamental imbalances in gender relations at young ages. In some Latin American countries, female homicides have increased over the last decades and exposure to violent environments brings health and social burdens, particularly for children and women.’

Study co-author Professor Ridhi Kashyap from Oxford’s Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science says:

- Whilst men are the major direct victims of violence, women are more likely to experience non-fatal consequences in violent contexts. These indirect effects of violence should not be ignored as they fuel gender inequalities, and can trigger other forms of vulnerability and causes of death.

Global violence is a public health crisis

According to the study, lower life expectancy is usually associated with greater lifetime uncertainty. In addition, living in a violent society creates vulnerability and uncertainty – and that, in turn, can lead to more violent behaviour.

Countries with high levels of violence experience lower levels of life expectancy than more peaceful ones.

The study estimate a gap of around 14 years in remaining life expectancy at age 10 between the least and most violent countries. In El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Colombia the gap in life expectancy with high income countries is predominantly explained by excess mortality due to homicides.

Study co-author Vanessa di Lego from the Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital says:

- It is striking how violence alone is a major driver of disparities in lifetime uncertainty. One thing is for certain, global violence is a public health crisis with tremendous implications on population health and should not be taken lightly.

 

About CPop (the Interdisciplinary Centre on Population Dynamics)

  • The Interdisciplinary Centre on Population Dynamics (CPop) is a cross-faculty collaboration between researchers drawn from demography, public health, biology, mathematics, economics, political science and humanities.
  • The center conducts innovative research to discover the basic causes and key consequences of changes in survival, longevity, and population aging, including also their economic, policy, and cultural implications.
  • More information on the Centre can be found here.
Editing was completed: 16.02.2023