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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(17): 8239-8248, 2019 04 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30910983

ABSTRACT

The historic event of the Late Antique Little Ice Age (LALIA) was recently identified in dozens of natural and geological climate proxies of the northern hemisphere. Although this climatic downturn was proposed as a major cause for pandemic and extensive societal upheavals in the sixth-seventh centuries CE, archaeological evidence for the magnitude of societal response to this event is sparse. This study uses ancient trash mounds as a type of proxy for identifying societal crisis in the urban domain, and employs multidisciplinary investigations to establish the terminal date of organized trash collection and high-level municipal functioning on a city-wide scale. Survey, excavation, sediment analysis, and geographic information system assessment of mound volume were conducted on a series of mounds surrounding the Byzantine urban settlement of Elusa in the Negev Desert. These reveal the massive collection and dumping of domestic and construction waste over time on the city edges. Carbon dating of charred seeds and charcoal fragments combined with ceramic analysis establish the end date of orchestrated trash removal near the mid-sixth century, coinciding closely with the beginning of the LALIA event and outbreak of the Justinian Plague in the year 541. This evidence for societal decline during the sixth century ties with other arguments for urban dysfunction across the Byzantine Levant at this time. We demonstrate the utility of trash mounds as sensitive proxies of social response and unravel the time-space dynamics of urban collapse, suggesting diminished resilience to rapid climate change in the frontier Negev region of the empire.


Subject(s)
Civilization/history , Social Class/history , Urban Population/history , Waste Products , Archaeology , Byzantium , Ceramics , Geologic Sediments , History, Ancient , Humans
2.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 176(2): 208-222, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34110625

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: During the Middle Ages, Portugal witnessed unprecedented socioeconomic and religious changes under transitioning religious political rule. The implications of changing ruling powers for urban food systems and individual diets in medieval Portugal is poorly understood. This study aimed to elucidate the dietary impact of the Islamic and Christian conquests. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Radiocarbon dating, peptide mass fingerprinting (ZooMS) and stable isotope analysis (δ13 C, δ15 N) of animal (n = 59) and human skeletal remains (n = 205) from Muslim and Christian burials were used to characterize the diet of a large historical sample from Portugal. A Bayesian stable isotope mixing model (BSIMM) was used to estimate the contribution of marine protein to human diet. RESULTS: Early medieval (8-12th century), preconquest urban Muslim populations had mean (±1SD) values of -18.8 ± 0.4 ‰ for δ13 C 10.4 ± 1 ‰ for δ15 N, indicating a predominantly terrestrial diet, while late medieval (12-14th century) postconquest Muslim and Christian populations showed a greater reliance on marine resources with mean (±1SD) values of -17.9 ± 1.3‰ for δ13 C and 11.1 ± 1.1‰ for δ15 N. BSIMM estimation supported a significant increase in the contribution of marine resources to human diet. DISCUSSION: The results provide the first biomolecular evidence for a dietary revolution that is not evidenced in contemporaneous historical accounts. We find that society transitioned from a largely agro-pastoral economy under Islamic rule to one characterized by a new focus on marine resources under later Christian rule. This economic change led to the naissance of the marine economy that went on to characterize the early-modern period in Portugal and its global expansion.


Subject(s)
Christianity/history , Diet , Islam/history , Urban Population/history , Adult , Anthropology, Physical , Bone and Bones/chemistry , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Diet/economics , Diet/history , Female , History, Medieval , Humans , Male , Nitrogen Isotopes/analysis , Portugal , Radiometric Dating
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(10): 2317-2322, 2018 03 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29463762

ABSTRACT

Scaling has been proposed as a powerful tool to analyze the properties of complex systems and in particular for cities where it describes how various properties change with population. The empirical study of scaling on a wide range of urban datasets displays apparent nonlinear behaviors whose statistical validity and meaning were recently the focus of many debates. We discuss here another aspect, which is the implication of such scaling forms on individual cities and how they can be used for predicting the behavior of a city when its population changes. We illustrate this discussion in the case of delay due to traffic congestion with a dataset of 101 US cities in the years 1982-2014. We show that the scaling form obtained by agglomerating all of the available data for different cities and for different years does display a nonlinear behavior, but which appears to be unrelated to the dynamics of individual cities when their population grows. In other words, the congestion-induced delay in a given city does not depend on its population only, but also on its previous history. This strong path dependency prohibits the existence of a simple scaling form valid for all cities and shows that we cannot always agglomerate the data for many different systems. More generally, these results also challenge the use of transversal data for understanding longitudinal series for cities.


Subject(s)
Cities , Models, Statistical , Population Density , Population Dynamics , Urban Population , Automobile Driving/statistics & numerical data , Cities/history , Cities/statistics & numerical data , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Motor Vehicles , Population Dynamics/history , Population Dynamics/statistics & numerical data , United States , Urban Population/history , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data
4.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 171(4): 628-644, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31925961

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Age-degenerative features of the metatarsals are poorly known despite the importance of metatarsal bone properties for investigating mobility patterns. We assessed the role of habitual activity in shaping the patterning and magnitude of sexual dimorphism in age-related bone loss in the hallucal metatarsal. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Cross-sections were extracted at midshaft from micro-computed tomography scan models of individuals from medieval rural (Abingdon Vineyard) and early industrial urban (Spitalfields) settings (n = 71). A suite of cross-sectional geometry dimensions and biomechanical properties were compared between populations. RESULTS: The rural group display generally stronger and larger metatarsals that show a greater capacity to resist torsion and that have comparatively greater bending strength along the medio-lateral plane. Men in both groups show greater values of cortical area than women, but only in the urban group do men show lower magnitudes of age-related decline compared to females. Women in rural and urban populations show different patterns of age-related decline in bone mass, particularly old women in the urban group show a marked decline in cortical area that is absent for women in the rural group. DISCUSSION: Lifetime exposure to hard, physical activity in an agricultural setting has contributed to the attainment of greater bone mass and stronger bones in young adults. Furthermore, over the life-course, less of this greater amount of bone is lost, such that sustained activity levels may have acted to buffer against age-related decline, and this is most pronounced for women, who are expected to experience greater bone loss later in life than men.


Subject(s)
Exercise , Hallux/pathology , Metatarsal Bones/pathology , Osteoporosis/history , Rural Population/history , Urban Population/history , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Female , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, Medieval , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Osteoporosis/pathology , Sex Factors , Young Adult
5.
Popul Stud (Camb) ; 73(3): 387-404, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30702026

ABSTRACT

During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, urban populations in Europe and North America continued to be afflicted by very high mortality as rapid urbanization and industrialization processes got underway. Here we measure the effect of population redistribution from (low-mortality) rural to (high-mortality) urban areas on changes in Scottish life expectancy at birth from 1861 to 1910. Using vital registration data for that period, we apply a new decomposition method that decomposes changes in life expectancy into the contributions of two main components: (1) changes in mortality; and (2) compositional changes in the population. We find that, besides an urban penalty (higher mortality in urban areas), an urbanization penalty (negative effect of population redistribution to urban areas on survival) existed in Scotland during the study period. In the absence of the urbanization penalty, Scottish life expectancy at birth could have attained higher values by the beginning of the twentieth century.


Subject(s)
Life Expectancy/history , Mortality/history , Urban Population/history , Urbanization/history , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Life Expectancy/trends , Male , Middle Aged , Mortality/trends , Scotland , Sex Distribution , Urban Population/trends
6.
Am J Epidemiol ; 187(4): 639-646, 2018 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28595333

ABSTRACT

This article examines how the epidemiologic transition and the reduction of the urban mortality penalty gave rise to the current mortality regime of the United States and demonstrates how the 1918 influenza pandemic signaled its advent. This article approaches those issues through the analysis of urban-rural mortality differentials from 1890 to 1930. Until 1910, infectious diseases dwarfed degenerative diseases in leading causes of death, and generally, the more urban the location was, the higher infectious disease and overall death rates were-a direct relationship. But by 1930, degenerative diseases had eclipsed infectious diseases, and infectious disease mortality had ceased to differ between cities and rural areas. The 1918 influenza pandemic broke out toward the end of these changes, and the larger the city was, the lower influenza and overall death rates were in that year-an inverse relationship. Such gradations characterized a new mortality regime emerging in the late 1910s and foreshadowed urban-rural mortality differentials in 1930 among persons aged 45 years or older, the group whose high rates of degenerative disease death would symbolize that regime. Thus, intertwined changes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries-a shift in leading causes of death from infectious diseases to degenerative diseases and a concomitant shift from a direct relationship to an inverse relationship between urban environment and mortality-produced the current mortality regime of the United States.


Subject(s)
Communicable Diseases/history , Mortality/history , Rural Population/history , Urban Population/history , Cause of Death , Communicable Diseases/epidemiology , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Influenza, Human/epidemiology , Influenza, Human/history , Noncommunicable Diseases/epidemiology , Pandemics , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Rural Population/trends , United States/epidemiology , Urban Population/trends
7.
Environ Manage ; 61(1): 132-146, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29098363

ABSTRACT

Mapping and quantifying urban landscape dynamics and the underlying driving factors are crucial for devising appropriate policies, especially in cities of developing countries where the change is rapid. This study analyzed three decades (1984-2014) of land use land cover change of Addis Ababa using Landsat imagery and examined the underlying factors and their temporal dynamics through expert interview using Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP). Classification results revealed that urban area increased by 50%, while agricultural land and forest decreased by 34 and 16%, respectively. The driving factors operated differently during the pre and post-1991 period. The year 1991 was chosen because it marked government change in the country resulting in policy change. Policy had the highest influence during the pre-1991 period. Land use change in this period was associated with the housing sector as policies and institutional setups were permissive to this sector. Population growth and in-migration were also important factors. Economic factors played significant role in the post-1991 period. The fact that urban land has a market value, the growth of private investment, and the speculated property market were among the economic factors. Policy reforms since 2003 were also influential to the change. Others such as accessibility, demography, and neighborhood factors were a response to economic factors. All the above-mentioned factors had vital role in shaping the urban pattern of the city. These findings can help planners and policymakers to better understand the dynamic relationship of urban land use and the driving factors to better manage the city.


Subject(s)
Agriculture/history , Urban Renewal/history , Agriculture/economics , Cities/economics , Cities/history , Demography , Developing Countries/economics , Developing Countries/history , Ethiopia , Forests , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Population Growth , Urban Population/history , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , Urban Renewal/economics , Urbanization/history
8.
J Sch Nurs ; 34(3): 203-210, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29020842

ABSTRACT

This study investigated the origin and implementation of school nursing in New York City, using traditional historical methods with a social history framework. The intent of this research was to produce a comprehensive historical analysis of school nursing at the turn of the 20th century in order to provide a historical framework to promote the work of school nurses today. Understanding the core fundamental concepts of school nursing from its origins and the significance of the emergence of community support for the role of the school nurse at the turn of the 20th century can inform current policy to back school nursing and school health today.


Subject(s)
Nurse's Role/history , School Nursing/history , Urban Population/history , Child , Child Welfare/history , Female , Health Promotion/history , History of Nursing , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , New York City
9.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 162(2): 208-228, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27696351

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The current understanding of child morbidity in Roman England is dominated by studies of single sites/regions. Much of the data are derived from third to fifth century AD Poundbury Camp, Dorchester, Dorset, considered an unusual site due to high levels of non-adult morbidity. There is little understanding of children in rural areas, and whether Poundbury Camp was representative of Romano-British childhood. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study provides the first large scale analysis of child health in urban and rural Roman England, adding to the previously published intra-site analysis of non-adult paleopathology at Poundbury Camp. Age-at-death and pathology prevalence rates were reassessed for 953 non-adults (0-17 years) from five major urban, six minor urban, and four rural sites (first to fifth century AD). The data were compared to the results from 364 non-adults from Poundbury Camp. RESULTS: Rural sites demonstrated higher levels of infant burials, and greater prevalence of cribra orbitalia in the 1.1-2.5 year (TPR 64.3%), and 6.6-10.5 year cohorts (TPR 66.7%). Endocranial lesions were more frequent in the minor urban sample (TPR 15.9%). Three new cases of tuberculosis were identified in urban contexts. Vitamin D deficiency was most prevalent at Poundbury Camp (CPR 18.8%), vitamin C deficiency was identified more frequently in rural settlements (CPR 5.9%). DISCUSSION: The Poundbury Camp data on morbidity and mortality are not representative of patterns in Roman England and other major urban sites. Rural children suffered from a distinct set of pathologies described as diseases of deprivation, prompting reconsideration of how Romano-British land management affected those at the bottom of the social hierarchy.


Subject(s)
Child Health/ethnology , Child Health/history , Rural Population/history , Urban Population/history , Adolescent , Bone and Bones/pathology , Child , Child, Preschool , England , History, Medieval , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Paleopathology , Scurvy , Tuberculosis , Vitamin D Deficiency
10.
BMC Public Health ; 17(Suppl 3): 444, 2017 07 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28832287

ABSTRACT

This commentary constructs a social history of Hillbrow, an inner-city suburb in Johannesburg, South Africa, based on a review of relevant published historical, anthropological and sociological texts. We highlight the significant continuities in the social structure of the suburb, despite the radical transformations that have occurred over the last 120 years.Originally envisaged as a healthy residential area, distinct from the industrial activity of early Johannesburg, Hillbrow was a prime location for health infrastructure to serve the city. By the late 1960s, the suburb had been transformed by the rapid construction of high rise office and apartment buildings, providing temporary low cost accommodation for young people, migrants and immigrants. In the 1980s, Hillbrow defied the apartheid state policy of racial separation of residential areas, and earned the reputation of a liberated zone of tolerance and inclusion. By the 1990s, affected by inner-city decay and the collapse of services for many apartment buildings, the suburb became associated with crime, sex work, and ungovernability. More recently, the revitalisation of the Hillbrow Health Precinct has created a more optimistic narrative of the suburb as a site for research and interventions that has the potential to have a positive impact on the health of its residents.The concentration of innovative public health interventions in Hillbrow today, particularly in the high quality health services and multidisciplinary research of the Hillbrow Health Precinct, creates the possibility for renewal of this troubled inner-city suburb.


Subject(s)
Cities/history , Health Services/history , Urban Population/history , Emigrants and Immigrants , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Housing , Humans , Research , Social Discrimination , Social Problems/history , South Africa , Transients and Migrants , Urbanization/history
11.
Br J Sociol ; 67(1): 138-60, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26898388

ABSTRACT

This paper proposes a re-thinking of the relationship between sociology and the biological sciences. Tracing lines of connection between the history of sociology and the contemporary landscape of biology, the paper argues for a reconfiguration of this relationship beyond popular rhetorics of 'biologization' or 'medicalization'. At the heart of the paper is a claim that, today, there are some potent new frames for re-imagining the traffic between sociological and biological research - even for 'revitalizing' the sociological enterprise as such. The paper threads this argument through one empirical case: the relationship between urban life and mental illness. In its first section, it shows how this relationship enlivened both early psychiatric epidemiology, and some forms of the new discipline of sociology; it then traces the historical division of these sciences, as the sociological investment in psychiatric questions waned, and 'the social' become marginalized within an increasingly 'biological' psychiatry. In its third section, however, the paper shows how this relationship has lately been revivified, but now by a nuanced epigenetic and neurobiological attention to the links between mental health and urban life. What role can sociology play here? In its final section, the paper shows how this older sociology, with its lively interest in the psychiatric and neurobiological vicissitudes of urban social life, can be our guide in helping to identify intersections between sociological and biological attention. With a new century now underway, the paper concludes by suggesting that the relationship between urban life and mental illness may prove a core testing-ground for a 'revitalized' sociology.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/history , Sociology , Urban Population , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Mental Disorders/etiology , Sociology/history , Sociology/methods , Urban Population/history
12.
Genetika ; 52(7): 831-51, 2016 Jul.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29368870

ABSTRACT

This review summarizes the results of the long-term studies performed at the Institute of General Genetics, Russian Academy of Sciences, in the field of genetic demography of migration processes in Russia and its capital. The main population-genetic parameters of migration and their dynamics in Moscow over a hundred years are given. Sociodemographic and population-genetic implications of migration processes are considered. A model predicting the population gene pool dynamics under migration pressure for genes of different localization (autosomal, sex-linked, and mitochondrial), exemplified by predicting the allele frequency dynamics in the Moscow population of some gene markers, including genes accounting for monogenic pathology and genes associated with resistance to socially significant diseases, are presented. The paper discusses the selective character of migration processes, in particular, processes of emigration, with respect to some genetically significant ethnodemographic traits; the problem of adaptation of migrants; and adaptive strategies of consolidation of ethnoconfessional groups in the megalopolis (compact settlement over the urban territory and positive assortative mating with respect to demographic traits). It was shown that, owing to the intense influx of migrants and gene flows between ethnic groups, the population of the megalopolis is of mixed origin in terms of ethnic, anthropologic, and genetic aspects. The results of the study suggest the necessity to develop a specific strategy of genetic database formation for the population of megalopolises for the purposes of medical genetics and forensic medicine.


Subject(s)
Emigration and Immigration/history , Human Genetics , Models, Genetic , Urban Population/history , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Male , Russia
13.
Local Popul Stud ; (96): 28-49, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29939514

ABSTRACT

Family reconstitutions have been undertaken only rarely in urban settings due to the high mobility of historical urban populations, in both life and death. Recently Gill Newton has outlined a methodology for the reconstitution of urban populations and we applied a modified version of this method to the large Westminster parish of St. Martin in the Fields between 1752 and 1812, a period that posed particular difficulties for family reconstitution because of the rapid lengthening of the interval between birth and baptism. The extraordinary richness of the records for St. Martin in the Fields made it possible to investigate burial and baptismal practices in great detail, and the extent and impact of residential mobility. We found that short-range, inter-parochial movement was so frequent that it was necessary to confine the reconstitution sample to windows in which families registered events at a single street address. Using birth interval analysis and the frequencies of twin births it was possible to demonstrate that the registration of birth events was fairly complete, but that many infant and child burials were missed. These missing burials probably resulted from the unreported export of corpses for burial in other parishes, a phenomenon for which we had considerable evidence. The limitations of family reconstitution in this highly mobile and heterogeneous urban population is discussed and we demonstrate some checks and corrections that can be used to improve the quality of such reconstitutions.


Subject(s)
Birth Intervals , Burial/history , Parturition , Population Dynamics/history , Urban Population/history , Birth Intervals/statistics & numerical data , England , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , Humans , Population Dynamics/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data
14.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 157(1): 107-20, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25613696

ABSTRACT

In the Roman period, urban and rural ways of living were differentiated philosophically and legally, and this is the first regional study of these contrasting life-ways. Focusing on frailty and mortality risk, we investigated how these differed by age, sex, and status, using coffin type as a proxy for social status. We employed skeletal data from 344 individuals: 150 rural and 194 urban (1st-5th centuries A.D.) from Dorset, England. Frailty and mortality risk were examined using indicators of stress (cribra orbitalia, porotic hyperostosis, nonspecific periostitis, and enamel hypoplastic defects), specific metabolic and infectious diseases (rickets, scurvy, and tuberculosis), and dental health (carious lesions and calculus). These variables were studied using Chi-square, Siler model of mortality, Kaplan-Meier analysis, and the Gompertz model of adult mortality. Our study found that overall, mortality risk and survivorship did not differ between cemetery types but when the data were examined by age, mortality risk was only significantly higher for urban subadults. Demographic differences were found, with urban cemeteries having more 0-10 and >35 year olds, and for health, urban cemeteries had significantly higher frequencies of enamel hypoplastic defects, carious lesions, and rickets. Interestingly, no significant difference in status was observed between rural and urban cemeteries. The most significant finding was the influence of the skeletal and funerary data from the Poundbury sites, which had different demographic profiles, significantly higher frequencies of the indicators of stress and dental health variables. In conclusion, there are significant health, demographic, and mortality differences between rural and urban populations in Roman Britain.


Subject(s)
Rural Population/history , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population/history , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Anthropology, Physical , Cemeteries , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , History, Ancient , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Middle Aged , Roman World/history , United Kingdom/epidemiology , Young Adult
16.
J Lesbian Stud ; 19(2): 192-211, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25760995

ABSTRACT

This article examines the spatial strategies used by Montréal lesbian activists in the 1970s and 1980s to fight for the lesbian "right to the city." After situating lesbian public activism within Henri Lefebvre's ideal of spatial justice, this article provides case studies of four moments during which Montréal lesbian activists joined or initiated public demonstrations as lesbians. The focus is on the multiple ways in which lesbian activists performed politicized lesbian identities in urban public spaces. Their spatial strategies in this first era of the lesbian and gay rights movement provide an alternative account of claiming lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer rights to the heterosexual city.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Female/history , Human Rights/history , Politics , Urban Population/history , Adult , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Quebec
17.
NTM ; 32(2): 107-136, 2024 06.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38789562

ABSTRACT

This article deals with the change in safety requirements and technological possibilities in the course of industrialization by looking at the establishment of street lighting in Bielefeld in the 19th century. As will be shown, the development from oil to gas lanterns coincided with a change in the security needs of the urban middle class. It was the technical possibilities of gas lighting to penetrate the urban space at night that made marginalized groups of people who were perceived as a security risk visible. This, together with the bourgeois internalization of the disciplinary effects of light, made this infrastructure possible in Bielefeld. While the urban populations of the pre-modern and early 19th century were still skeptical or dismissive of lanterns, by the mid-19th century their installation was already part of decidedly urban bourgeois demands for more safety in the areas of personal, economic and traffic safety. The lantern thus changed from an instrument of pre-modern visibility to an instrument of constant visibility in the modern age, which at the same time led to new lines of conflict when the expansion and extension of lighting was not as comprehensive as demanded by the urban bourgeoisie. In addition to the changes and conjunctures of security needs in the course of industrialization, Bielefeld also shows that an internalization of the concept of sovereignty by no means meant the absence of conflict. On the basis of administrative acts and petitions, the history of Bielefeld's street lighting is placed in a larger transformation of security, technology and urban spatial design from the perspective of historical security research, drawing on Foucoult's concept of gouvernmentalité. The results show that the history of technology and infrastructure can significantly deepen and contextualize the findings of historical security research. The use and expectations of technology were an essential part of a new understanding of security, as well as the socially segmented organization of urban space through a sometimes precarious alliance of different groups of actors.


Subject(s)
Lighting , History, 19th Century , Lighting/history , Humans , Germany , Safety/history , Urban Population/history
18.
Psychol Sci ; 24(9): 1722-31, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23925305

ABSTRACT

The Google Books Ngram Viewer allows researchers to quantify culture across centuries by searching millions of books. This tool was used to test theory-based predictions about implications of an urbanizing population for the psychology of culture. Adaptation to rural environments prioritizes social obligation and duty, giving to other people, social belonging, religion in everyday life, authority relations, and physical activity. Adaptation to urban environments requires more individualistic and materialistic values; such adaptation prioritizes choice, personal possessions, and child-centered socialization in order to foster the development of psychological mindedness and the unique self. The Google Ngram Viewer generated relative frequencies of words indexing these values from the years 1800 to 2000 in American English books. As urban populations increased and rural populations declined, word frequencies moved in the predicted directions. Books published in the United Kingdom replicated this pattern. The analysis established long-term relationships between ecological change and cultural change, as predicted by the theory of social change and human development (Greenfield, 2009).


Subject(s)
Cultural Evolution/history , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Social Change/history , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Psychology, Social , Rural Population/history , Social Identification , United Kingdom , United States , Urban Population/history
19.
Am J Hum Biol ; 25(3): 318-28, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23382098

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: It has been suggested that epigenetic inheritance is an important factor influencing mortality. We use data about the historical population of Québec (years 1670-1740) to study whether parents modify their offspring's phenotype epigenetically prior to conception in response to predicted/perceived mortality. If so, children growing up in the predicted environment enjoy a phenotype-environment-match that should lower mortality, whereas children growing up in a nonpredicted environment should have a higher mortality. METHODS: We use the large urban-rural mortality differential to capture the predicted/perceived mortality environment. We categorize children into different groups by their migration status: conceived and living in the same environment (urban or rural); conceived in one but born in another environment (urban-to-rural or rural-to-urban); and born in one but migrating to another environment. We use Kaplan-Meier survival curves and fixed effect survival models to estimate to what extent child survival up to the age of 15 depends on migration status. RESULTS: Child mortality within families that moved from urban to rural areas does not depend on the child's migration status. Within families that moved to urban areas, children who were conceived and born in the rural areas exhibit the lowest mortality. This contradicts a phenotype-environment-mismatch scenario, which would result in higher rather than lower mortality. CONCLUSION: We do not find evidence for functional (adaptive) epigenetic inheritance. Migration into an environment with lower or higher extrinsic mortality affects child mortality within the families differently than predicted by the concept of epigenetic inheritance. The results suggest that epigenetic inheritance may not be important for child mortality among migrants.


Subject(s)
Emigration and Immigration/history , Environment , Epigenesis, Genetic , Phenotype , Population Dynamics/history , Adolescent , Child , Child Mortality , Child, Preschool , Emigration and Immigration/statistics & numerical data , Female , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Maternal Age , Paternal Age , Population Dynamics/statistics & numerical data , Quebec , Rural Population/history , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Urban Population/history , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data
20.
J Biosoc Sci ; 44(3): 273-88, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22030449

ABSTRACT

This paper demonstrates that although modern BMIs in the US have increased, 19th century BMIs in Philadelphia were lower than elsewhere within Pennsylvania, indicating that urbanization and agricultural commercialization were associated with lower BMIs. After controlling for stature, blacks consistently had greater BMI values than mulattos and whites; therefore, there is no evidence of a 19th century mulatto BMI advantage in the industrializing North. Farmers' BMIs were consistently heavier than those of non-farmers.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/history , Body Mass Index , Urban Population/history , White People/history , Adult , Black or African American/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Occupational Health/history , Philadelphia , Prejudice , Prisons/history , Rural Population/history , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Socioeconomic Factors , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , White People/statistics & numerical data
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