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Counters and classifiers of deaths and diseases, including demographers and epidemiologists, have long been fascinated with the statistical regularities of social inequalities in morbidity and mortality. The earliest studies of social class and mortality coincided with the development of the life table in the 1600s. Interest in the subject has waxed and waned over the centuries, stimulated in part by economic conditions and political movements. In the context of growing economic inequalities during the past decade, the demise of the Soviet Union, and the dominance of capitalism under the military and ideological leadership of the United States, academic interest in
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