Cargando…

Culture, biology, and anthropological demography /

Two distinctive approaches to the study of human demography exist within anthropology today: anthropological demography and human evolutionary ecology. The first stresses the role of culture in determining population parameters, while the second posits that demographic rates reflect adaptive behavio...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Roth, Eric Abella
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Colección:New perspectives on anthropological and social demography.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Part I. Anthropological Demography and Human Ecological Behavioural Ecology:
  • 1. Two solitudes
  • 2. Why bother?
  • 3. Anthropological demography: culture, not biology
  • 4. Human evolutionary ecology: biology, not culture
  • 5. Discussion: cultural and biological reductionism
  • Part II. Reconciling Anthropological Demography and Human Evolutionary Ecology:
  • 6. Common ground
  • 7. Demographic strategies
  • 8. Reproductive interests: social interactions, life effort and demographic strategies: a Rendille example
  • 9. Sepaade as male mating effort
  • 10. Rendille primogeniture as a parenting strategy
  • 11. Summary: demographic strategies as links between culture and biology
  • Part III. Mating Effort and Demographic Strategies:
  • 12. Mating effort as demographic strategies
  • 13. Cross-cultural mating strategies: polygyny and bridewealth, monogamy and dowry
  • 14. Bridewealth and the matter of choice
  • 15. Demographic and cultural change: values and morals
  • 16. The end of the sepaade tradition: behavioral tracking and moral change
  • Part IV. Demographic Strategies as Parenting Effort:
  • 17. Parenting effort and the theory of allocation
  • 18. The Trivers-Willard model and parenting strategies
  • 19. Parity-specific parental strategies: the case of primogeniture
  • 20. Local resource competition model
  • 21. Infanticide and child abandonment: accentuating the negative
  • 22. Adoption in modern China: stressing the positive
  • 23. Summary: culture and biology in parental effort
  • Part V. Future Research Directions:
  • 24. The central place of sex in anthropology and evolution
  • 25. Male sexuality, education and high risk behavior
  • 26. Final ground: demographic transitions
  • Part VI. References Cited.