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Human Adaptive Strategies: Ecology, Culture, and Politics 3/e

Daniel G. Bates

Published June 2004 by Allyn & Bacon
Copyright 2005, 272 pp., Paper
ISBN: 0-205-41815-5
List Price:
$48.20

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Summary

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Features

  • Takes an ecological and evolutionary approach.
  • Shows how people will often attempt to find solutions that go beyond traditional cultural solutions or customary behaviors when faced with new problems and new situations.
  • Looks at human behavior and material environments cross-culturally.
  • Includes five chapters that focus on ethnographic case studies and discussion relating to specific forms of human food procurement or subsistence (Chs. 3-7).
  • Explores the emerging field of political ecology and stresses the importance of gender.
  • Concludes with suggestions for risk assessment as we plan for the future.


Table of Contents

All chapters conclude with “Summary,” “Key Terms, ” and “Suggested Readings.”

1. The Study of Human Behavior.

The Nature of Scientific Inquiry.

Cultural Relativism.

Aspects of Culture.

Behavior, Language, and Learning.

The Science of Anthropology.



2. Evolution, Ecology, and Politics.

The Human Evolutionary Legacy.

Human Ecology.

The Evolution of Procurement Systems.

Adapting to Environmental Problems.

Political Ecology.



3. Foraging.

Box 3.1: Who Speaks for Whom?

The Organization of Energy.

Social Organization.

Settlement Patterns and Mobility.

Resilience, Stability, and Change.

The Dobe Ju/'hoansi.

The Inuit or Eskimo.

The Batak Foragers of the Philippines.



4. Horticulture: Feeding the Household.

The Horticultural Adaptation.

The Yanamamö.

The Pueblo of North America.



5. Nomadic Pastoralism.

The Pastoral Adaptation.

Social Organization.

The Ariaal of Northern Kenya.

The Yörük of Turkey.

Al-Murra of Saudi Arabia.



6. Intensive Agriculture: Feeding the Cities.

The Development of Intensive Agriculture.

The Social Consequences of Intensive Agriculture.

The Tamang of Nepal.

Where the Dove Calls: The Mexican Village of Cucurpe.

The Kofyar of Central Nigeria.

Directions of Change in Rural Egypt.



7. Industrial Society and Beyond: Feeding the World.

From Intensive Agriculture to Industrialized Farming.

Centralization, Collectivization, and Communism.

Dams and Their Consequences.

Village Becomes Suburb: Shinohata, Japan.

Urbanized Rural Society: Farming in the United States.

The Rise and Fall of Collective Agriculture in Bulgaria.



8. Change and Development: The Challenges of Globalism.

The Emerging Fourth World in the New Millenium.

Adaptation and Processes of Cultural Transformation.

Beyond Industrialism.

The Ecological Consequences of Post-industrialism.

Can We Survive Progress?

The Ethics of Development Work.




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