Studies in Behavioral Anthropology
Title | Studies in Behavioral Anthropology PDF eBook |
Author | Theodore D. Graves |
Publisher | Rowman Altamira |
Pages | 426 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 9780759105751 |
This is a unique collection of essays illustrating the author's distinctive approach to cross-cultural research, and a valuable companion volume to Graves's Behavioral Anthropology. Graves and his co-authors offer fifteen research essays as supplemental readings in research methodology, to convey the challenge and excitement of conducting systematic behavioral science research cross-culturally. For those concerned with a behavioral, scientific approach to anthropology, this book will be a valuable reference and teaching tool.
Behavioral Anthropology
Title | Behavioral Anthropology PDF eBook |
Author | Theodore D. Graves |
Publisher | Rowman Altamira |
Pages | 430 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 9780759105737 |
Behavioral Anthropology is a unique introductory text that combines an intellectual biography with an overview of the methodological principles of cross-cultural research. Each chapter deals with a specific methodological issue: research design; the role of theory; strategies for measuring behavior; psychological or situational variables; samples and surveys simple and complex methods of data analysis and interpretation. For those interested in the behavioral approach, this book will be a valuable reference and teaching tool.
Anthropology
Title | Anthropology PDF eBook |
Author | Behavioral and Social Sciences Survey. Anthropology Panel |
Publisher | Prentice Hall |
Pages | 168 |
Release | 1970 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN |
Monograph on past accomplishments and present status of anthropology (ethnography) and related behavioural and social sciences fields, with particular reference to current trends in the USA - includes federal financing, training programme design, educational level of university graduates anthropologists, research methodology, etc.
Adaptation and Human Behavior
Title | Adaptation and Human Behavior PDF eBook |
Author | Napoleon Chagnon |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 527 |
Release | 2017-09-08 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1351329197 |
This volume presents state-of-the-art empirical studies working in a paradigm that has become known as human behavioral ecology. The emergence of this approach in anthropology was marked by publication by Aldine in 1979 of an earlier collection of studies edited by Chagnon and Irons entitled Evolutionary Biology and Human Social Behavior: An Anthropological Perspective. During the two decades that have passed since then, this innovative approach has matured and expanded into new areas that are explored here. The book opens with an introductory chapter by Chagnon and Irons tracing the origins of human behavioral ecology and its subsequent development. Subsequent chapters, written by both younger scholars and established researchers, cover a wide range of societies and topics organ-ized into six sections. The first section includes two chapters that provide historical background on the development of human behavioral ecology and com-pare it to two complementary approaches in the study of evolution and human behavior, evolutionary psychology, and dual inheritance theory. The second section includes five studies of mating efforts in a variety of societies from South America and Africa. The third section covers parenting, with five studies on soci-eties from Africa, Asia, and North America. The fourth section breaks somewhat with the tradition in human behavioral ecology by focusing on one particularly problematic issue, the demographic transition, using data from Europe, North America, and Asia. The fifth section includes studies of cooperation and helping behaviors, using data from societies in Micronesia and South America. The sixth and final section consists of a single chapter that places the volume in a broader critical and comparative context. The contributions to this volume demonstrate, with a high degree of theoretical and methodological sophistication--the maturity and freshness of this new paradigm in the study of human behavior. The volume will be of interest to anthropologists and other professions working on the study of cross-cultural human behavior.
Behavioral and Social Science Research
Title | Behavioral and Social Science Research PDF eBook |
Author | National Research Council |
Publisher | National Academies Press |
Pages | 136 |
Release | 1982-02-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0309032784 |
Behavioral and Social Science Research: A National Resource specifies appropriate criteria for assessing the value, significance, and social utility of basic research in the social sciences. This report identifies illustrative areas of basic research in the social sciences that have developed analytic frameworks of high social utility and describes the development of these frameworks and their utilization. It also identifies illustrative areas of basic research in the social sciences that are likely to be of high value, significance, and/or social utility in the near future, reviews the current state of knowledge in these areas, and indicates research efforts needed to bring these areas to their full potential.
Bones, Bodies amd Behavior
Title | Bones, Bodies amd Behavior PDF eBook |
Author | George W. Stocking |
Publisher | Univ of Wisconsin Press |
Pages | 280 |
Release | 1990-08-28 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0299112535 |
History of Anthropology is a series of annual volumes, inaugurated in 1983, each broadly unified around a theme of major importance to both the history and the present practice of anthropological inquiry. Bones, Bodies, Behavior, the fifth in the series, treats a number of issues relating to the history of biological or physical anthropology: the application of the "race" idea to humankind, the comparison of animals minds to those of humans, the evolution of humans from primate forms, and the relation of science to racial ideology. Following an introductory overview of biological anthropology in Western tradition, the seven essays focus on a series of particular historical episodes from 1830 to 1980: the emergence of the race idea in restoration France, the comparative psychological thought of the American ethnologist Lewis Henry Morgan, the archeological background of the forgery of the remains "discovered" at Piltdown in 1912, their impact on paleoanthropology in the interwar period, the background and development of physical anthropology in Nazi Germany, and the attempts of Franx Boas and others to organize a consensus against racialism among British and American scientists in the late 1930s. The volume concludes with a provocative essay on physical anthropology and primate studies in the United States in the years since such a consensus was established by the UNESCO "Statements on Race" of 1950 and 1951. Bringing together the contributions of a physical anthropologist (Frank Spencer), a historical sociologist (Michael Hammond), and a number of historians of science (Elazar Barkan, Claude Blanckaert, Donna Haraway, Robert Proctor, and Marc Swetlitz), this volume will appeal to a wide range of students, scholars, and general readers interested in the place of biological assumptions in the modern anthropological tradition, in the biological bases of human behavior, in racial ideologies, and in the development of the modern human sciences.
Environment and cultural behavior
Title | Environment and cultural behavior PDF eBook |
Author | Andrew Peter Vayda |
Publisher | |
Pages | 485 |
Release | 1982 |
Genre | |
ISBN |