Female foragers sometimes hunt, yet gendered divisions of labor are real: a comment on Anderson et al. (2023) The Myth of Man the Hunter

Evolution and Human Behavior Vol/Iss. N/A Elsevier Published In Pages: ??
By Venkataraman, Vivek V., Hoffman, Jordie, Farquharson, Kyle, Davis, Elizabeth H., Hagen, Edward H., Hames, Raymond B., Hewlett, Barry S., Glowacki, Luke , Jang, Haneul, Kelly, Robert L., Kramer, Karen L., Lew-Levy, Sheina, Starkweather, Katie, Syme, Kristen L., Stibbard-Hawkes, Duncan N.E.

Hypothesis

Women do not significantly participate in big-game hunting.

Note

The authors replicated the Anderson et al. (2023) method and found bias in the sample and coding errors. They found that less than a third of the original coded societies involved regular female large-scale hunting. Specifically, in the new coding, only 9/63 societies involved regular participation. The original hypothesis can be found here: http://192.168.10.248/documents/1453/hypotheses/5140.

Test

Test NameSupportSignificanceCoefficientTail
Percentage comparisonsSupportedUNKNOWNUNKNOWNUNKNOWN

Variables

Variable NameVariable Type OCM Term(s)
Women participate in big-game huntingDependentHunting And Trapping, Division Of Labor By Gender