| Publication Type | journal article |
| School or College | School of Social & Behavioral Science |
| Department | Anthropology |
| Creator | Hawkes, Kristen |
| Title | Hunting and the evolution of egalitarian societies: lessons from the Hadza |
| Date | 2000 |
| Description | Political hierarchies are common in human societies but absent among many mobile hunter-gatherers. So egalitarian social organizations have been attributed to limits that foraging imposes on wealth accumulation. But male-dominance hierarchies characterize all the great apes, our nearest relatives. The absence of wealth is not enough to explain the absence of hierarchy. |
| Type | Text |
| Publisher | S. Illinois Univ. Cen. for Archaeological Investigations |
| First Page | 59 |
| Last Page | 83 |
| Language | eng |
| Bibliographic Citation | Hawkes, K. (2000). Hunting and the evolution of egalitarian societies: lessons from the Hadza, in Hierarchies in action: cui bono? Ed. Michael Diehl. Center for Archaeological Investigations Occasional Paper, 27, 59-83. |
| Rights Management | ©Southern Illinois University |
| Format Medium | application/pdf |
| Format Extent | 1,793,243 bytes |
| Identifier | ir-main,4199 |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6d22g7m |
| Setname | ir_uspace |
| ID | 706684 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6d22g7m |