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De jure and de facto deaths. The impact of unregistered attendees and absentees on urban death rates in early twentieth-century Belgium

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Subtitle:L'impact des présents et des absents non enregistrés sur les taux de mortalité urbaine en Belgique au début du XX e siècle

Unregistered temporary migration can create large discrepancies between death rates according to the legal, factual or habitual residence of the deceased. the most accurate death rates are those that refer to population numbers based on habitual residence, as they concern the population fully exposed to the hazards of a specific municipality. Using the Belgian population census, the register of vital events and individual death certificates, we calculate the death rates of the population with habitual residence in three large Belgian cities (Brussels, Liège and Schaarbeek) around 1910 and compare them with the typically calculated rates based on de facto deaths. Most significantly, the presence of medical institutions in large cities such as Brussels and Liège artificially increased the rates based on deaths within their territory. In the suburb of Schaarbeek, on the other hand, large numbers of people with habitual residence died outside the town. Consequently, our results suggest that for some age groups, Brussels' well-known excess mortality during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries can partly be attributed to the large number of people without habitual residence who died in the capital.

Journal: Population (Engl Ed)
ISSN: 1634-2941
Issue: 1
Volume: 73
Pages: 91-117
Publication year:2018
BOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:1
CSS-citation score:1
Authors:International
Authors from:Government, Higher Education
Accessibility:Closed