Making A Living Subsistence, Economy, and Distribution: How Humans Do It Economic Production as an Adaptive Strategy  Food is necessary for survival; the means of subsistence.

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Transcript Making A Living Subsistence, Economy, and Distribution: How Humans Do It Economic Production as an Adaptive Strategy  Food is necessary for survival; the means of subsistence.

Making A Living
Subsistence, Economy,
and Distribution: How
Humans Do It
Economic Production as an
Adaptive Strategy
 Food
is necessary for survival; the
means of subsistence of a given
group has been called their adaptive
strategy.
 Cohen describes five adaptive
strategies: foraging, horticultural,
agriculture, pastoralism, and
industrialism.
Foraging (a.k.a. Hunting and
Gathering)


Foraging was the only
means of subsistence
for the first 5 million
years of human
history.
Hunting and gatherer
continued to exist
after the multiple
inventions of
agriculture in those
areas ill suited to
growing crops.
What is Foraging?

Foraging relies on
the collection of
nutritionally
significant plant
resources and the
capture of
important animal
protein sources for
food.
The Importance of Gathering


For much of the 20th
Century,
anthropologists
assumed hunting was
more important than
gathering.
Subsequent
ethnographic work
showed plant
resources usually
make up 80% of the
diet.
Foragers live off the land, usually in
small groups called “bands”


Because foragers are
highly mobile and
frequently live in
marginal
environments, they
tend to live in groups
of 100 or less.
This mobile lifestyle
leads to temporary
housing structures.
Other Forager Characteristics or
Correlates
 Most
members of bands related.
 Practice band exogamy.
 Membership of band may change
during the course of a year.
 Practice seasonal transhumance.
 Egalitarian.
 Sexual division of labor.
Examples of Foragers






California Indians
(balanophagy).
Great Basin Indians
(Paiute, Shoshone,
Ute).
Inuit (a.k.a. Eskimos).
Australian Aborigines.
!Kung San of South
Africa.
Baka.
Foragers
Cultivation
Cultivation is food production rather food
gathering.
 According to Cohen’s scheme, the three
forms of food production are horticulture,
agriculture, and pastoralism.
 Horticulture and agriculture focus on plant
resource production; pastoralism focuses
on herding and “harvesting” their animals.

What is horticulture?
 Horticulture
is the small-scale
planting and harvesting of food
plants using simple tools and small
garden plots.
 Horticulturalists frequently use
swidden or “slash-and-burn”
techniques for fertilization of the soil.
 Shifting cultivation common.
Slash-and-Burn Horticulture
Location of World Horticulturalists
Advantages and Disadvantages of
Horticulture
Advantages:
 Can sustain large groups (example:
Kuikuru of South America).
 Allows for flexible sedentism (staying
in one place).
Disadvantages:
 Limited carrying capacity.
 Leads to rapid soil exhaustion.
Horticultural Groups
Yanomami.
 The tribes of Papua
New Guinea.
 The Maya of
Mexico.
 Hawaiian Islanders
 Various Bantuspeaking tribes of
Africa.

Agriculture
 Differs
from horticulture in that it is
more labor intensive, uses more
sophisticated tools (such as plows),
engages the use of draft animals,
may use terracing, and employs
irrigation.
 More land is used, and greater
quantities of crops are produced.
Domesticated Animals and Farming

Domesticated
animals, especially
cattle and horses,
have played an
important role in
raising crops,
providing both
labor (plowing) and
fertilizer.
Irrigation and Terracing


Irrigation provides
nutrients and a
continual source of
water to crops,
allowing for continual
use of fields (rather
than shifting).
Terracing allows for
cultivation of crops in
mountainous areas.
Costs and Benefits of Agriculture
Human labor input greater for agriculture,
since time and energy are required to
build and maintain canals and terraces, as
well as to feed and care for animals.
 Yields are much greater with agriculture
over horticulture; provides long-term,
dependable crops that translates to lower
labor costs per unit.

The “cultivation continuum”
 Horticulture
= low-labor, shifting-plot
 Agriculture = labor-intensive,
permanent plot.
 Some world economies are
intermediate between horticulture
and agriculture, using sectorial
fallowing, which is a form of
horticulture that is employed by
larger populations.
Intensive Agriculture
Intensive agriculture allows for large
populations.
 However, large populations combined with
intensive agricultural practices result in
extreme environmental degradation.
 Intensive agriculture often leads to
specialization in certain crops (i.e., rice,
maize, potatoes), thereby sacrificing
dietary diversity.

Intensive Agriculture Gone Wrong

The ancient Maya
civilization
collapsed about
A.D. 800, following
a combination of
agricultural
intensification and
population growth
that led to
deforestation and
soil erosion.
Pastoralism


Pastoralists are
herders who focus on
animals such as goats,
sheep, cattle, camels,
and yaks.
Traditional pastoralists
are found in parts of
north and eastern
Africa, the Middle
East, Asia, and
Europe.
Pastoralism as a living
Pastoralists use their herds for food (milk,
blood, meat).
 Pastoralists frequently trade with farmers
for grains and vegetables, or may engage
in limited horticulture or foraging.
 Pastoralists practice pastoral nomadism
(the whole group moves) or transhumance
(only certain members of the group follow
the herd animals).

Modes of Production
Economy = a system of production,
distribution and consumption of resources.
 A mode of production is a way of
organizing production:
“A set of social relations through which labor
is deployed to wrest energy from nature
by means of tools, skills, organization, and
knowledge.”
(Wolf 1982).

Capitalism vs. Non-Industrial
modes of production
 In
non-industrial societies, labor is
given as a social obligation, and is
frequently kin-based.
 In capitalist industrial societies,
money buys labor power, and their
exists a social gap between the
purchasers of labor and their
laborers (bosses and workers).
Industrialism
 Large
scale, industrial production,
involving factories and
mechanization.
 Industrial production can be either
capitalist or socialist.
 Industrialism relies on corporate
agriculture.
Means of Production
 The
means, or factors of production,
involve territory, labor, and
technology.
 In non-industrial societies, there is a
closer relationship between laborers
and the means of production.
 In industrial societies, there is
frequent alienation of the workers
from the means of production.
Economic Anthropological
Questions
 How
are production, distribution, and
consumption organized in different
societies? The focus of this question
is on systems.
 What motivates people in different
cultures to produce, distribute or
exchange, and consume? The focus
of this question is on individuals.
Distribution and Exchange
The Market Principle: operates in a
capitalist economy by governing the
distribution of land, labor, natural
resources, technology, and capital. Items
are bought and sold, and rely on the law
of supply and demand.
 Redistribution: goods and services move
towards the center, then redistributed
(example: Cherokee chiefs).

Reciprocity
Reciprocity is an exchange between
social equals; common in egalitarian
societies. There are three types:
 Generalized: someone gives with no
explicit expectation for a like gift.
 Balanced: giving with expecting
something in return.
 Negative: giving with the expectation
of immediate return.