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- Divided Armies: Inequality and Battlefield Performance in Modern War on . . .
What remains to be demonstrated, however, is whether military inequality can help explain battlefield performance in more contemporary wars Equally shaped by advances in military technology and combined arms doctrine, the modern battlefield is far more lethal than its pre-1917 forerunner
- How Inequality Hobbles Military Power - Foreign Affairs
In his 2004 book, Military Power, the international relations scholar Stephen Biddle found that material factors such as GDP, population, and military spending have had, at best, a weak connection to victory in wars since 1900
- The Costs of Social Inequality for Military Effectiveness
Can the poor performance of Russia’s military in its invasion of Ukraine be explained partially by social and economic inequalities in its ranks, which include forced conscripts as well as private mercenaries paid several times more than the salaries of ordinary soldiers?
- Divided Armies: Inequality and Battlefield Performance in Modern War
His argument is that military inequality—or the extent to which a military includes ethnic groups that are disadvantaged or discriminated against in broader society—causes substantial problems on the battlefield
- Roundtable 12-11 on Divided Armies: Inequality and Battlefield . . .
We would expect that when a low or medium inequality actor faces an adversary with high inequality, it would likely win on the battlefield (see Figure 1) Returning to the Mahdist Wars, this interaction could further help us understand how the change in adversary mattered
- Success and Failure of Great Powers in Long-Term Rivalries
Short of comprehensive victory in war or national collapse, the punitive and coercive imposition of terms is not a common avenue to success in rivalries Excessive ambition and strategic overreach contribute to several varieties of failure
- The Costs of Social Inequality for Military Effectiveness
The book’s key empirical finding is that “successful armies are inclusive; unsuccessful ones largely die by their own hands, wracked by the poison of inequality that kills them, sometimes slowly, sometimes quickly, from the inside out ”
- How the Weak Win Wars: A Beginner’s Guide to Asymmetric Warfare
An analysis of nearly 200 asymmetric wars fought since 1800 reveals a startling trend: weaker actors have been winning more and more often
- Military Strength Comparisons for 2026 - Global Firepower
Paramilitary Capital Cities Equipment Aircraft Fleet Strength Fighters Interceptors Attack Strike Transports (Fixed-Wing)
- War and Peace - Our World in Data
Conflict deaths recently increased in the Middle East, Africa, and Europe, stressing that the future of these trends is uncertain On this page, you can find data, visualizations, and writing on how common war and peace are between and within countries, and how this has changed over time
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