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West Coast Poverty Center

DIALOGUE ON RESEARCH AND POLICY No. 6

Class, Race/Ethnicity, and Military Service in the Recent Wars

PROJECT SUMMARY

With funding from the Marguerite Casey Foundation, Washington State University Associate Professor Alair MacLean produced a report about trends in military service by race/ethnicity and class that sought to determine whether the men who served during the recent wars came disproportionately from minority and low-income families. In brief, Dr. MacLean found no evidence that the poor or minorities had been enlisting disproportionately during the recent wars. However, she did find evidence that individuals from families at the top of the income distribution were less likely than their peers to enlist in the years immediately following high school, suggesting a de facto “wealth exemption.”

KEY FINDINGS

There were no statistically significant differences in enlistment between blacks, whites, and Hispanics in either 2006 or 2012. Individuals whose race/ethnicity was categorized as “other” were significantly less likely than whites to have enlisted in these years.

Consistent with the idea of a middle class draft, people were relatively less likely to have enlisted if their parents had low levels of education or higher levels. People from the second SES quartile or, lower middle class, were also most likely to enlist, followed by individuals from the third quartile.  In terms of income, people were least likely to enlist if they grew up in families at the top of the income distribution, though this difference is only statistically significant for 2006, two years after the respondents were high school seniors. Individuals were most likely to enlist from the middle two income quartiles.

Rather than a “poverty draft,” these analyses instead suggest that the armed forces depended on the middle class during the recent wars. In addition, there may have been an informal “wealth exemption,” in which the affluent were less likely to enlist than everyone else (at least in the two years immediately after high school). Furthermore, at least during these wars, minorities were not disproportionately likely to enlist.

While advocates and journalists have tended to combine the poor and minorities when voicing concerns about potential inequities in service, researchers have tended to examine these factors separately. The available evidence suggests that people may enlist according to different, potentially overlapping patterns with respect to poverty and race/ethnicity, and future research should attempt to explore those patterns.

PRACTITIONER RESPONSE

In March 2015 the West Coast Poverty Center invited practitioners and policy experts to discuss Professor MacLean’s research about the socioeconomics of recruitment and service in the military. Five participants joined the conversation with backgrounds in military recruitment; philanthropy; defense; economics; sociological and demographic research; personal experience in the military; and work with veterans. The research findings resonated with these practitioners and stimulated further discussion about socioeconomic differences, race/ethnicity, and recruitment issues in the military. Practitioners also discussed the role of the military in addressing inequality.

The full DIALOGUE report includes more detailed findings, and a summary of the discussion with the practitioners and policymakers.  Download DIALOGUE 6 [pdf].

Read the report by Alair MacLean here.

DIALOGUE PARTICIPANTS

RESEARCHERS

Alair MacLean, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Washington State University

DISCUSSANTS*

Catherine N. Barry, 2014-15 Visiting Scholar, Department of Demography, University of California, Berkeley

Ernestine Faircloth, Retired Army Sergeant and Office Manager, Georgia STAND-UP

Curt Gilroy, Retired Senior Defense official

James Hosek, Senior Economist, RAND Corporation

Cheryl Milloy, Evaluation and Research Officer, Marguerite Casey Foundation

* Participants’ affiliations at the time of the call.