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Anthropology and contemporary human problems / John H. Bodley.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Palo Alto : Mayfield Pub. Co., c1985.Edition: 2a edDescription: xv, 258 p. : ill. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0874846714 (pbk.)
  • 9780874846713 (pbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306 19
Contents:
Anthropological perspectives on contemporary human problems. Nature and scope of the problems ; Crisis intensity ; Crisis awareness and response ; Anthropology's contribution ; The significance of tribal cultures ; The uniqueness of tribal cultures ; The dangerous spirit of Rousseau ; Romanticism: why not? ; The original affluent society ; Our tribal superiors ; The antiprimitivists -- Adaption, tribal culture, and the environmental crisis. Cultural evolution and adaption ; Nature and scope of the environmental crisis ; Environmental crisis and cultural change ; Global disequilibrium: "The limits to growth" ; Global 2000 ; "Roots of the environmental crisis" ; Ideological roots ; Herders, self-interest, and tragic commons ; Pleistocene extinctions ; Tribal cultures and the environment ; Fire and tribal resource management ; Tribal economics ; Nature in tribal ideology ; The Desana equilibrium model ; Tribal conservation in the Pacific --
Natural resources and the culture of consumption. Energy and culture: basic considerations ; The culture of consumption defined ; Resource consumption in America ; Taking stock ; The economics of resource depletion ; The consumption culture's environmental cost: Western coal ; Consumption culture versus tribal culture: Bougainville copper --
World hunger and the evolution of food systems. The Malthusian dilemma ; The evolution of food systems ; The domestic mode of food production ; Technological advances in food production ; State-level food systems ; Famine in the modern world ; Measuring hunger ; Needless hunger in Bangladesh -- Industrial food systems. Factory food production ; Factory potatoes versus swidden sweet potatoes ; Energy costs of the distribution system ; Potato chips and manoic cakes ; Fishing, trading, and "ghost acreage" ; The limits of food production --
The population problem. Population pressure, carrying capacity, and optimum population ; Population control among tribal hunters ; Population equilibrium in aboriginal Australia ; The Neolithic population explosion ; Population control among tribal village farmers ; The Tsembaga equilibrium model ; The Havasupai Indians ; Island population problems ; The state intervenes ; Policy implications --
Internal order. Violence in America ; Social order in egalitarian societies ; Social order in nonegalitarian societies ; Population density, stratification, and conflict ; The origin of states and inequality ; The disintegration of social order -- War and international order. The doomsday machine ; MAD: mutual assured destruction ; Postattack society: will the survivors envy the dead? ; The nuclear winter ; Cross-cultural perspectives on war ; War and human nature ; The causes of war ; Preventing war --
The future. The diagnosis: "terminal civilization" ; Impact assessment and regional planning ; Planning progress for the Pacific Northwest ; Views of the future ; The best of both worlds: a paraprimitive solution ; The small-nation alternative.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Libro Libro Biblioteca Juan Bosch Biblioteca Juan Bosch Ciencias Sociales Ciencias Sociales (3er. Piso) GN 320 B668a 1985 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00000046319

Bibliography: p. 231-247.

Includes index.

Anthropological perspectives on contemporary human problems. Nature and scope of the problems ; Crisis intensity ; Crisis awareness and response ; Anthropology's contribution ; The significance of tribal cultures ; The uniqueness of tribal cultures ; The dangerous spirit of Rousseau ; Romanticism: why not? ; The original affluent society ; Our tribal superiors ; The antiprimitivists -- Adaption, tribal culture, and the environmental crisis. Cultural evolution and adaption ; Nature and scope of the environmental crisis ; Environmental crisis and cultural change ; Global disequilibrium: "The limits to growth" ; Global 2000 ; "Roots of the environmental crisis" ; Ideological roots ; Herders, self-interest, and tragic commons ; Pleistocene extinctions ; Tribal cultures and the environment ; Fire and tribal resource management ; Tribal economics ; Nature in tribal ideology ; The Desana equilibrium model ; Tribal conservation in the Pacific --

Natural resources and the culture of consumption. Energy and culture: basic considerations ; The culture of consumption defined ; Resource consumption in America ; Taking stock ; The economics of resource depletion ; The consumption culture's environmental cost: Western coal ; Consumption culture versus tribal culture: Bougainville copper --

World hunger and the evolution of food systems. The Malthusian dilemma ; The evolution of food systems ; The domestic mode of food production ; Technological advances in food production ; State-level food systems ; Famine in the modern world ; Measuring hunger ; Needless hunger in Bangladesh -- Industrial food systems. Factory food production ; Factory potatoes versus swidden sweet potatoes ; Energy costs of the distribution system ; Potato chips and manoic cakes ; Fishing, trading, and "ghost acreage" ; The limits of food production --

The population problem. Population pressure, carrying capacity, and optimum population ; Population control among tribal hunters ; Population equilibrium in aboriginal Australia ; The Neolithic population explosion ; Population control among tribal village farmers ; The Tsembaga equilibrium model ; The Havasupai Indians ; Island population problems ; The state intervenes ; Policy implications --

Internal order. Violence in America ; Social order in egalitarian societies ; Social order in nonegalitarian societies ; Population density, stratification, and conflict ; The origin of states and inequality ; The disintegration of social order -- War and international order. The doomsday machine ; MAD: mutual assured destruction ; Postattack society: will the survivors envy the dead? ; The nuclear winter ; Cross-cultural perspectives on war ; War and human nature ; The causes of war ; Preventing war --

The future. The diagnosis: "terminal civilization" ; Impact assessment and regional planning ; Planning progress for the Pacific Northwest ; Views of the future ; The best of both worlds: a paraprimitive solution ; The small-nation alternative.

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