The role of the aged in primitive society
Yale University Press • New Haven • Published In • Pages: ??•
By Simmons, Leo W.
Hypothesis
Prestige of the aged is negatively correlated with severe climate and impermanent residence. It is positively correlated for aged men and women where they have property rights and influence in government. Aged women enjoy more prestige in hunting-gathering and fishing societies and in societies where matrilineal family organization prevails. Aged men have high prestige where the food supply is constant, where family organization type is patrilineal, in herding and framing societies, and where they control secret societies for the initiation of the young (79, 80)
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Yule’s Q | Supported | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Family Organization | UNKNOWN | Family |
Participation/influence In Government | UNKNOWN | Political Behavior |
Permanency Of Residence | UNKNOWN | Internal Migration |
Prestige For Aged (men, Women) | UNKNOWN | Status And Treatment Of The Aged |
Property Rights | UNKNOWN | Property System |
Secret Societies | UNKNOWN | Sodalities |
Severity Of Climate | UNKNOWN | Climate |
Subsistence Type | UNKNOWN | Production And Supply |