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Journal ArticleDOI

New Guinea Leadership as Ethnographic Analogy: A Critical Review

Paul Roscoe
- 01 Jun 2000 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 2, pp 79-126
TLDR
A review of the literature on leadership in contact-era New Guinea can be found in this article, where the authors identify a number of problems in the ethnography and theory of New Guinea leadership, and provide a brief guide to deploying the ethnographic and theoretical literature.
Abstract
Increasingly, archaeologists are recognizing cultural anthropological work in New Guinea as an important source of ethnographic analogy for understanding the initial stages of cultural evolution. This article critically reviews the literature on leadership in contact-era New Guinea. It is intended as an introduction both to different theoretical interpretations of leadership, as these have developed from Marshal Sahlins's Big-man archetype to the present, and to the primary literature on the topic. It points to several implications for archaeological theory, identifies a number of problems in the ethnography and theory of contact-era New Guinea leadership, and concludes with a brief guide to deploying the ethnographic and theoretical literature.

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Citations
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The reaction against analogy

Alison Wylie
TL;DR: This chapter describes a series of arguments and counterarguments through which the ambivalence about analogy noted by recent commentators took definite shape.
Journal ArticleDOI

Escape from the State of Nature: Authority and Hierarchy in World Politics

TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative view of relational authority and recent research on the practice of sovereignty is developed that varies along two continua defined by security and economic relations, and then tested in a large-nstudy of the effects of international hierarchy on the defense effort of countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Norm enforcement among the Ju/'hoansi Bushmen : A case of strong reciprocity?

TL;DR: This paper will use data from 308 conversations among the Ju/’hoansi (!Kung) Bushmen to examine the dynamics of norm enforcement, to evaluate the costs of punishment in a forager society and understand how they are reduced, and to determine whether hypotheses that center on individual self-interest provide sufficient explanations for bearing the costs for norm enforcement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leadership solves collective action problems in small-scale societies.

TL;DR: Behavioural data from the Tsimane forager-horticulturalists of Bolivia and Nyangatom nomadic pastoralists of Ethiopia are evaluated to support the hypothesis that leadership is an important means by which collective action problems are overcome in small-scale societies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Vines of Complexity

TL;DR: The authors view egalitarian structures as complex institutions which, together with their accompanying ideologies, have arisen to reduce the transaction costs of exchange in small-scale societies and argue that egalitarian structures and the coalitions that maintain them vary as greatly in configuration, scope, and nature as do hierarchical structures of power.
References
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MonographDOI

The gender of the gift : problems with women and problems with society in Melanesia

TL;DR: In the most original and ambitious synthesis yet undertaken in Melanesian scholarship, Strathern argues that gender relations have been a particular casualty of unexamined assumptions held by Western anthropologists and feminist scholars alike.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of the Origin of the State: Traditional theories of state origins are considered and rejected in favor of a new ecological hypothesis

TL;DR: The circumscription theory in its elaborated form explains why states arose where they did, and why they failed to arise elsewhere, and shows the state to be a predictable response to certain specific cultural, demographic, and ecological conditions.
Book

Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies

Margaret Mead
TL;DR: Mead's seminal book Sex & Temperament as mentioned in this paperocusing on the intimate lives of three New Guinea tribes from infancy to adulthood, the author advances the theory that many so-called masculine and feminine characteristics are not based on fundamental sex differences but reflect the cultural conditioning of different societies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution of human societies : from foraging group to agrarian state

Allen Johnson, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1988 - 
TL;DR: The evolution of global society is discussed in this paper, where the authors introduce the family-level group, the local group, and the corporate group and the big man collectivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Poor Man, Rich Man, Big-man, Chief: Political Types in Melanesia and Polynesia

TL;DR: With an eye to their own life goals, the native peoples of Pacific Islands unwittingly present to anthropologists a generous scientific gift: an extended series of experiments in cultural adaptation and evolutionary development as discussed by the authors.