No universals in the cultural evolution of kinship terminology
Evolutionary Human Sciences • Vol/Iss. 2 • The Cambridge University Press • • Published In • Pages: e42 •
By Passmore, Sam, Jordan, Fiona M.
Abstract
Note
Authors categorized the terminologies as Crow, Eskimo, Hawaiian, Iroquois, Omaha, and Sudanese; all of these show various results in each hypothesis. While marriage, common ancestry, and residence patterns were not strongly universal predictors of change in kinship terminologies, the authors suggest further research about other factors: religion and land-tenure.
Sample Used | Coded Data | Comment |
---|---|---|
D-PLACE | Other researchers | Kinship terminologies and social structures from 176 societies within the Austronesian, Bantu, and Uto-Aztecan language families. |
Hypothesis | Supported |
---|---|
Change in kinship terminologies will be universally predicted by residence patterns. | Not supported |
Change in kinship terminologies will be universally predicted by common ancestry. | Not supported |
Change in kinship terminologies will be universally predicted by mode of marriage. | Not supported |
Documents and Hypotheses Filed By: stefania.becerralavado