Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Christopher von Rueden – Why do men seek positions of status or leadership?

April 4, 2011 @ 12:00 am

Christopher von Rueden: UCSB Department of Anthropology

The relationship between social status and reproductive success in small-scale societies can provide insight into how natural selection may have acted on status-seeking behavior in ancestral human environments. With data from the Tsimane horticulturalists of Bolivia and other small-scale societies, I show that high male status increases lifetime fitness, and I analyze the factors responsible for increases in surviving offspring among high status men. Interview data from the Tsimane suggest that mate acquisition and social support mediate the status-fitness relationship. Some of the fitness benefits of high status may accrue in the context of leadership within collective actions. However, observation and experimental induction of collective action suggest that Tsimane leaders do not differentially benefit from the division of spoils (although leadership may improve team efficiency). Identifying the proximate pathways by which status and leadership generate current fitness sheds light on the kinds of social relationships evolution has motivated men to maintain.
http://bec.ucla.edu/papers/VonRueden1.pdf

Details

Date:
April 4, 2011
Time:
12:00 am
Event Categories:
,

Details

Date:
April 4, 2011
Time:
12:00 am
Event Categories:
,