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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(13)2021 03 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33758100

ABSTRACT

Research examining institutionalized hierarchy tends to focus on chiefdoms and states, while its emergence among small-scale societies remains poorly understood. Here, we test multiple hypotheses for institutionalized hierarchy, using environmental and social data on 89 hunter-gatherer societies along the Pacific coast of North America. We utilize statistical models capable of identifying the main correlates of sustained political and economic inequality, while controlling for historical and spatial dependence. Our results indicate that the most important predictors relate to spatiotemporal distribution of resources. Specifically, higher reliance on and ownership of clumped aquatic (primarily salmon) versus wild plant resources is associated with greater political-economic inequality, measuring the latter as a composite of internal social ranking, unequal access to food resources, and presence of slavery. Variables indexing population pressure, scalar stress, and intergroup conflict exhibit little or no correlation with variation in inequality. These results are consistent with models positing that hierarchy will emerge when individuals or coalitions (e.g., kin groups) control access to economically defensible, highly clumped resource patches, and use this control to extract benefits from subordinates, such as productive labor and political allegiance in a patron-client system. This evolutionary ecological explanation might illuminate how and why institutionalized hierarchy emerges among many small-scale societies.


Subject(s)
Cultural Evolution/history , Hierarchy, Social/history , Natural Resources/supply & distribution , Social Evolution , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Anthropology, Cultural , Enslavement/history , Food Insecurity , Geography , History, Ancient , Humans , Models, Theoretical , North America , Spatio-Temporal Analysis , American Indian or Alaska Native/history
2.
Am J Epidemiol ; 190(7): 1306-1315, 2021 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33576372

ABSTRACT

The 1950s-1970s Chinese send-down movement can be treated as a natural experiment to study the impact of adolescent exposure on subsequent health. This paper used data from the China Family Panel Studies 2010 to evaluate the long-term impact of the Chinese send-down movement on individual health later in life. Drawing from the life-course perspective, results from difference-in-differences models suggested that the send-down experience had a significant impact on worse self-rated health; the pathways from structural equation models showed that subsequent achievements-age of marriage and educational attainment-had mediating effects linking the send-down experience to worse self-rated health and better mental health, respectively. Taken together, our results highlight the roles of the send-down experience and post-send-down characteristics in shaping health outcomes later in life.


Subject(s)
Adult Survivors of Child Adverse Events/statistics & numerical data , Adverse Childhood Experiences/statistics & numerical data , Hierarchy, Social/history , Long Term Adverse Effects/epidemiology , Social Determinants of Health/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult Survivors of Child Adverse Events/psychology , Adverse Childhood Experiences/psychology , China/epidemiology , Educational Status , Female , Health Status Disparities , History, 20th Century , Humans , Latent Class Analysis , Long Term Adverse Effects/psychology , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged
3.
Nature ; 582(7812): 384-388, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32555485

ABSTRACT

The nature and distribution of political power in Europe during the Neolithic era remains poorly understood1. During this period, many societies began to invest heavily in building monuments, which suggests an increase in social organization. The scale and sophistication of megalithic architecture along the Atlantic seaboard, culminating in the great passage tomb complexes, is particularly impressive2. Although co-operative ideology has often been emphasised as a driver of megalith construction1, the human expenditure required to erect the largest monuments has led some researchers to emphasize hierarchy3-of which the most extreme case is a small elite marshalling the labour of the masses. Here we present evidence that a social stratum of this type was established during the Neolithic period in Ireland. We sampled 44 whole genomes, among which we identify the adult son of a first-degree incestuous union from remains that were discovered within the most elaborate recess of the Newgrange passage tomb. Socially sanctioned matings of this nature are very rare, and are documented almost exclusively among politico-religious elites4-specifically within polygynous and patrilineal royal families that are headed by god-kings5,6. We identify relatives of this individual within two other major complexes of passage tombs 150 km to the west of Newgrange, as well as dietary differences and fine-scale haplotypic structure (which is unprecedented in resolution for a prehistoric population) between passage tomb samples and the larger dataset, which together imply hierarchy. This elite emerged against a backdrop of rapid maritime colonization that displaced a unique Mesolithic isolate population, although we also detected rare Irish hunter-gatherer introgression within the Neolithic population.


Subject(s)
Consanguinity , Hierarchy, Social/history , Incest/history , Societies/history , Adult , Burial/history , DNA, Ancient/analysis , Family/history , Female , Genome, Human/genetics , Haplotypes/genetics , History, Ancient , Humans , Ireland , Male
5.
PLoS One ; 14(4): e0215692, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31017952

ABSTRACT

Where should we look to understand the origin of inequality? I propose an unusual window of evidence-modern societies. I hypothesize that evidence for the origin of inequality is encoded in the institutional structure of industrial societies. To test this idea, I use a model to project modern trends into the past. This model takes the modern relation between energy, hierarchy, and inequality and creates a hindcast of the origin of inequality. The results are broadly consistent with the available evidence. The model predicts an explosion of inequality with the transition from hunter-gathering to agriculture, followed by a plateau. This finding potentially opens a new window of evidence into the origin of inequality.


Subject(s)
Energy-Generating Resources , Hierarchy, Social , Socioeconomic Factors , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 21st Century , History, Ancient , History, Medieval , Humans , Income , Models, Theoretical , Socioeconomic Factors/history
6.
Hist Psychiatry ; 29(1): 79-95, 2018 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29239665

ABSTRACT

During the First World War injured servicemen were constructed as a better class of patient than civilians, and their care was prioritized in social and political discourses. For the mentally disordered servicemen themselves, however, these distinctions were permeable and transient. This article will challenge the reality of the 'privileged' service patient in civil asylums in Scotland. By examining the impact of the war on asylum structures, economies and patient health, this study will explore exactly which patients were valued in these difficult years. In so doing, this paper will also reveal how the lives of institutionalized ex-servicemen and the civilian insane inside district asylums were not quite as distinct as political and social groups would have liked.


Subject(s)
Health Priorities/history , Hierarchy, Social/history , Mental Disorders/history , Mental Disorders/therapy , Military Personnel/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Military Personnel/psychology , Scotland
7.
Med Hist (Barc) ; (4): 4-21, 2015.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26999983

ABSTRACT

The professional recognition and sanitary reforms that physicians sought from the political powers throughout the constitutional era of the reign of Alfonso XIII were a continuation of those from the XIXth century. One of the most important demands was that rural physicians should answer directly to the State, especially with reference to salaries, rather than to municipal authorities generally held by caciques. There were constant problems between them. This work presents the case of the physician from El Pobo, Alfredo Alegre, whose conviction put health professionals, students and most of society on the warpath, joining their demands to a petition for pardon. This tragic story, apart from showing the importance of the daily press as a source, highlights the difficulties offered by professional practice in rural areas submerged in the past and the inability of politicians to resolve problems during one of the most hectic periods of our history.


Subject(s)
Physicians/history , Professional Practice/history , Salaries and Fringe Benefits/history , Federal Government/history , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 20th Century , Local Government/history , Physicians/legislation & jurisprudence , Physicians/organization & administration , Professional Practice/legislation & jurisprudence , Professional Practice/organization & administration , Rural Population , Salaries and Fringe Benefits/legislation & jurisprudence , Spain
8.
Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol ; 6(11): a008599, 2014 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24968702

ABSTRACT

Attempts have been made recently to determine the identity of the so-called "Aryans" as components of the Indian population by using DNA analysis. This is largely to ascertain whether they were indigenous to India or were foreign arrivals. Similar attempts have been made to trace the origins of caste groups on the basis of varna identities and record their distribution. The results so far have been contradictory and, therefore, not of much help to social historians. There are problems in the defining of categories and the techniques of analysis. Aryan is a linguistic and cultural category and not a biological one. Caste groups have no well-defined and invariable boundaries despite marriage codes. Various other categories have been assimilated into particular castes as part of the evolution of social history on the subcontinent. A few examples of these are discussed. The problems with using DNA analysis are also touched on.


Subject(s)
Culture , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, Ancient , Human Migration/history , Humans , India/ethnology , Language/history , Social Identification , White People/ethnology , White People/history
10.
J Med Humanit ; 35(1): 1-18, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24306364

ABSTRACT

This essay examines Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861) in light of new archival findings on the medical practices of Dr. James Norcom (Dr. Flint in the narrative). While critics have sharply defined the feminist politics of Jacobs's sexual victimization and resistance, they have overlooked her medical experience in slavery and her participation in reform after escape. I argue that Jacobs uses the rhetoric of a woman-led health reform movement underway during the 1850s to persuade her readers to end slavery. This essay reconstructs both contexts, revealing that Jacobs links enslaved women's physical and sexual vulnerability with her female readers' fears of male doctors' threats to modesty and of their standard bleed-and-purge treatments. Jacobs illustrates that slavery damages women's health as much as heroic medicine, and thus merits the political activism of her readers. Specifically, Jacobs dramatizes her conflicts with the rapacious physician-master at moments that are crucial to women's health: marriage, pregnancy, childbirth, and motherhood. Ultimately, this essay advances a new understanding of the role of health reform in social change: it galvanized other movements such as women's rights and abolition, particularly around issues of bodily autonomy for women and African Americans.


Subject(s)
Enslavement/history , Feminism/history , Gender Identity , Health Care Reform/history , Hierarchy, Social/history , Literature, Modern/history , Medicine in Literature , Physician-Patient Relations , Sex Offenses/history , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Female , History, 19th Century , Humans , Male , Pregnancy , United States , Young Adult
12.
Psicol. soc. (Online) ; 25(spe): 23-32, 2013.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-697172

ABSTRACT

This article is a literature review on how the ideology of white racial supremacy dehumanizes and colonizes the minds of Whites and Blacks in Brazil. For this aim I use critical references about whiteness to highlight dehumanization processes in Whites, and I make use of critical references of Black and African studies to examine specific dehumanization processes of the Black population. Furthermore, the work seeks to reflect on possibilities of mental humanization and de-colonization in both groups considering current policies of Affirmative Action in Education in Brazil...


Este artigo é uma revisão de literatura sobre como a ideologia da supremacia racial branca desumaniza e coloniza a mente de brancos e negros no Brasil. Para tanto, utilizo referências críticas sobre branquitude para destacar processos de desumanização em brancos; e lanço mão de referências críticas dos estudos negros e africanos para analisar processos de desumanização específicos da população negra. Além disso, o trabalho busca refletir sobre possibilidades de humanização e descolonização mental em ambos os grupos a partir de políticas de Ações Afirmativas atuais na área de Educação no Brasil...


Subject(s)
Humans , Colonialism/history , White People/psychology , Ethnicity/history , Racism/history , Dehumanization , Hierarchy, Social/history , Psychology, Social
13.
Psicol. soc. (online) ; 25(spe): 23-32, 2013.
Article in English | Index Psychology - journals | ID: psi-63589

ABSTRACT

This article is a literature review on how the ideology of white racial supremacy dehumanizes and colonizes the minds of Whites and Blacks in Brazil. For this aim I use critical references about whiteness to highlight dehumanization processes in Whites, and I make use of critical references of Black and African studies to examine specific dehumanization processes of the Black population. Furthermore, the work seeks to reflect on possibilities of mental humanization and de-colonization in both groups considering current policies of Affirmative Action in Education in Brazil.(AU)


Este artigo é uma revisão de literatura sobre como a ideologia da supremacia racial branca desumaniza e coloniza a mente de brancos e negros no Brasil. Para tanto, utilizo referências críticas sobre branquitude para destacar processos de desumanização em brancos; e lanço mão de referências críticas dos estudos negros e africanos para analisar processos de desumanização específicos da população negra. Além disso, o trabalho busca refletir sobre possibilidades de humanização e descolonização mental em ambos os grupos a partir de políticas de Ações Afirmativas atuais na área de Educação no Brasil.(AU)


Subject(s)
Ethnicity/history , White People/psychology , Colonialism/history , Racism/history , Hierarchy, Social/history , Dehumanization , Psychology, Social
14.
J Sci Study Relig ; 51(1): 20-41, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22616087

ABSTRACT

A number of studies have noted that small religious groups with charismatic leaders seem to have different gender dynamics than do groups without. We argue that the presence of such a leader changes what charisma "means" in such a group. Without such a leader, strong personalities may appear charismatic and lead to positions of high status­and such dynamics historically have tended to be associated with a positional advantage to males. With such a leader, however, charisma is more likely to be compatible with receptivity and decoupled from gender characteristics that tend to disadvantage women, leading charismatic women to have greater status than they would otherwise have.


Subject(s)
Gender Identity , Leadership , Personality , Power, Psychological , Religion , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Religion/history
15.
Soc Polit ; 19(1): 38-57, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22611572

ABSTRACT

The article is the result of qualitative research of informal care markets in Slovenia in the field of childcare, elder care, and cleaning. The author assesses Slovenia's position in the "global care chain" and finds that "local care chains" prevail in the field of childcare and elder care, while a co-occurrence of female gender, "other" ethnicity, and poverty is typical in the field of household cleaning. The main emphasis of the article is on the analysis of hierarchization of the informal market of care work according to following two criteria: social reputation of individual type of care work and citizenship status of care workers.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Child Care , Hierarchy, Social , Home Care Services , Household Work , Women , Work , Caregivers/economics , Caregivers/education , Caregivers/history , Caregivers/legislation & jurisprudence , Caregivers/psychology , Child Care/economics , Child Care/history , Child Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Care/psychology , Child, Preschool , Gender Identity , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Home Care Services/economics , Home Care Services/history , Home Care Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Household Work/economics , Household Work/history , Household Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Slovenia/ethnology , Women/education , Women/history , Women/psychology , Work/economics , Work/history , Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Work/physiology , Work/psychology
17.
J Fam Hist ; 36(4): 404-23, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22164358

ABSTRACT

Courtship choices and matrimonial partners remained highly limited and well defined in the late antebellum South but two categories encompassed the bulk of objectionable variables: community ("spatial") and class ("social"). As a general rule, white antebellum southerners seldom married anyone residing outside their own space and rarely married anyone identified outside their own social place. This article examines these socio-spatial boundaries in the rural plantation regions of western Tennessee. Based on a detailed database of 122 new marriages in Madison County (1851-1855), the conclusions of this article reinforce the strength of these geocultural borders. Nine of ten white southerners married within their own class. However, a few notable exceptions complicate efforts to craft a monolithic interpretation, and exceptions are always illuminating. This article encourages reexamination of the subtle interplay between space and place in the slave South -- as evidenced in the universal pursuit of matrimony.


Subject(s)
Community Networks , Courtship , Family , Hierarchy, Social , Marriage , Social Behavior , Community Networks/history , Courtship/ethnology , Courtship/psychology , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 19th Century , Marriage/ethnology , Marriage/history , Marriage/legislation & jurisprudence , Marriage/psychology , Race Relations/history , Race Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/psychology , Social Behavior/history , Social Identification , Spatial Behavior , Tennessee/ethnology , United States/ethnology
18.
Holocaust Genocide Stud ; 25(2): 219-51, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22073444

ABSTRACT

The press in Alabama covered major events taking place in Germany from the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis in 1933 through the Nuremberg Trials in 1946. Journalists in the state provided extensive coverage, and editors did not hesitate to opine on the persecution of the Jews in Europe. Yet, Alabama's white-run press failed in the end to explain the events as a singularly Jewish tragedy. The state's black-run press, for its part, used the news of the mass killings of the Jews to warn against the dangers of conceptions of racial superiority­a primary concern for black southerners living in the Jim Crow South.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Mass Media , Population Groups , Prejudice , Race Relations , Violence , Alabama/ethnology , Germany/ethnology , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/economics , Holocaust/ethnology , Holocaust/history , Holocaust/legislation & jurisprudence , Holocaust/psychology , Humans , Mass Media/economics , Mass Media/history , Population Groups/education , Population Groups/ethnology , Population Groups/history , Population Groups/legislation & jurisprudence , Population Groups/psychology , Race Relations/history , Race Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/psychology , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , Violence/economics , Violence/ethnology , Violence/history , Violence/legislation & jurisprudence , Violence/psychology , World War II
19.
Int Migr Rev ; 45(2): 243-68, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22069767

ABSTRACT

A great number of women from China, Vietnam, and Indonesia recently arrived in Taiwan to marry men of lower social strata. Such an unusual pattern of migration has stimulated debates about the status and the citizenship of the new arrivals. This study analyzes Taiwanese responses toward these marriage migrants by using a national survey conducted in 2004. Three aspects of restrictive attitudes were tapped concerning these newcomers: (1) rights to work; (2) access to public health insurance; and (3) full citizenship. Immigrants from China were most opposed, compared to women with other origins (Southeast Asia, Japan, Europe, and the US). The seemingly unrelated regression estimation regression results do not support the split labor market hypotheses, as marriage migrants do not appear to be economic threats toward members of the lower classes. In contrast, ethnic nationalism plays a key role in determining the natives' restrictive attitudes. The case of Taiwan represents a special genre, where ethnic politics selectively arouses the social rejection of women immigrants of certain origins.


Subject(s)
Emigration and Immigration , Hierarchy, Social , Marriage , Prejudice , Spouses , Women , China/ethnology , Emigration and Immigration/history , Emigration and Immigration/legislation & jurisprudence , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Indonesia/ethnology , Marriage/ethnology , Marriage/history , Marriage/legislation & jurisprudence , Marriage/psychology , Social Alienation/psychology , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Spouses/education , Spouses/ethnology , Spouses/history , Spouses/legislation & jurisprudence , Spouses/psychology , Taiwan/ethnology , Vietnam/ethnology , Women/education , Women/history , Women/psychology , Women's Health/ethnology , Women's Health/history , Women's Rights/economics , Women's Rights/education , Women's Rights/history , Women's Rights/legislation & jurisprudence
20.
Ninet Century Fr Stud ; 39(3-4): 240-58, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22069798

ABSTRACT

This article is a close reading of Gustave D'Eichthal and Ishmayl Urbain's Lettres sur la race noire et la race blanche (1839), written during the decade prior to the "second" French emancipation in 1848. The article argues that the hierarchical gendering of race described in the letters is reflective of metropolitan concerns about potential for social disorder accompanying slave emancipation in the French colonies. In arguing for social reconciliation through interracial marriage and its offspring, the symbolically charged figure of the mulatto, the authors deployed gendered and familial language to describe a stable post-emancipation society.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics , Gender Identity , Marriage , Race Relations , Racial Groups , Social Problems , Colonialism/history , Family Characteristics/ethnology , Family Characteristics/history , France/ethnology , Hierarchy, Social/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , Marriage/ethnology , Marriage/history , Marriage/legislation & jurisprudence , Marriage/psychology , Race Relations/history , Race Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/psychology , Racial Groups/education , Racial Groups/ethnology , Racial Groups/history , Racial Groups/legislation & jurisprudence , Racial Groups/psychology , Social Change/history , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , Spouses/education , Spouses/ethnology , Spouses/history , Spouses/legislation & jurisprudence , Spouses/psychology
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