Human Adaptive Strategies: Ecology, Culture, and Politics

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By (author): "Daniel G. Bates"
Publish Date: January 1991
Human Adaptive Strategies: Ecology, Culture, and Politics
ISBN0205418155
ISBN139780205418152
AsinHuman Adaptive Strategies: Ecology, Culture, and Politics
Original titleHuman Adaptive Strategies: Ecology, Culture, and Politics (3rd Edition)
Based on Bates' Cultural Anthropology, this book provides a framework for analyzing cultures based on their economic systems. Cultural ecology is the study of human behavior and culture within an environmental context. It examines how humans adapt to their environment and how the environment shapes culture. Based on a selection of materials from Bates and Fratkin's Cultural Anthropology, Third Edition, Human Adaptive Strategies uses case studies to show how cultures evolved within the context of their environment and how their methods of surviving in their environment have affected other aspects of their culture. One reviewer says, Concentrating, as the book does, on subsistence patterns and cultural ecology, it creates a conceptual structure conducive to the needs of the introductory student in anthropology. The new third edition includes an expanded discussion of basic ecological concepts and ecosystem components and organization; expanded material on population related issues; and addresses in some depth the controversy involving Napolean Chagnon's work as it touches on a number of important aspects of scholarship and research.