39 research outputs found

    Machiavelli, Burckhardt, and the making of Florentine historical identity

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    Notes for a study of fertility

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    Indonesia against the trend? Ageing and inter-generational wealth flows in two Indonesian communities

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    Indonesian family systems do not conform to the prevailing image of Asian families, the predominant arrangements being nuclear and bilateral, with an important matrilineal minority. This paper considers the strength of family ties in two communities, focussing particularly on inter-generational flows of support to and from older members. Data are drawn from a longitudinal anthropological demography that combines ethnographic and panel survey methods. Several sources of variation in family ties are detailed, particularly the heterogeneity of support flows - balanced, upward, and downward - that co-exist in both communities. Different norms in each locale give sharply contrasting valuations of these flows. The ability of families to observe norms is influenced by the effectiveness of networks and by socio-economic status

    Malthus and formal analysis: a cautionary tale

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    The language of malaria in Abui: An interdisciplinary investigation of healthcare practices in Alor, Eastern Indonesia

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    We report on an interdisciplinary collaboration between public health experts, linguists, and botanists which seeks to better understand indigenous perspectives on malaria among the Abui [abz] speaking communities of Alor Island, Eastern Indonesia. Malaria is endemic in Alor and is highly resistant to common conventional treatment regimens (Sutanto et al. 2009). There is a low rate of compliance with modern malaria treatments, and a correspondingly high reliance on traditional treatment methods (Krentel 2008). Our research attempts to understand traditional knowledge of malaria in Abui and its relevance to modern healthcare. We analyze a corpus of unstructured interviews concerning health-related problems in Abui in order to better understand the conceptualization of disease (Forster 1976). This includes the systematic study of metaphor (Author 2016), sequencing of symptom descriptions (Author 2016), symptom-based indigenous classification of malaria, an inventory of traditional health-protecting practices, and an inventory of medical plants. The plant terminology reveals a syncretism between terms referring to diseases and the plants which either treat or cause those diseases. For example, the term takaya denotes both the ti plant (Cordyline fruticosa) and a severe form of malaria (Plasmodium falciparum). The leaves of the ti plant takaya are tied onto valuable trees such as candlenut, areca palm, and jackfruit to create a protective spell which wards off theft of the fruits or nuts of that tree. Transgressing this protection by taking the fruits or nuts without permission will cause the transgressor to suffer the takaya disease. The existence of supernatural causes may go unnoticed when interviews are conducted in Indonesian, the national language closely associated with modernity. However, the pervasiveness of plant-disease syncretism within Abui belies the continuing significance of traditional beliefs regarding disease. The collaborative methodology described here shows great promise for improving our understanding of the conceptualization of malaria in Abui and thus increasing treatment efficacy for this disease. Moreover, this approach provides a platform for documentary linguistics which includes a high level of community engagement. The healthcare interviews yield a culturally significant corpus of spontaneous speech which also serves as an independent knowledge base to evaluate the reliability and accuracy of ethnobotanical research. Finally, we suggest several ways in which our approach can be applied to future healthcare research in other domains and with other communities. References Author. 2016. The Pragmatics Behind the Medical and Health Knowledge in Alor: An Understanding of how disease is conceptualized in the Abui language. Honors thesis. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Du Bois, Cora. 1944. The People of Alor: a social-psychological study of an East Indian island. Minnesota: The University of Minnesota Press Forster, George M. 1976. Disease Etiologies in Non-Western Medical Systems. American Anthropologist 78(4): 773-782. Krentel, Alison. 2008. Why do individuals comply with mass drug administration for lymphatic filariasis? A case study from Alor District, Indonesia. PhD dissertation. London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. Sutanto, I. Nurhayati, S. S., Manoempil, P., Baird, J.K. 2009. Resistance to Choloroquine by Plasmodium vivax at Alor in the Lesser Sundas Archipelago in Eastern Indonesia. The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 81(2), 338-342. Author. 2016. The Semantics of Complex Sentences in the Discourse of Health and Diseases: A Case Study in Abui. Honors thesis. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

    Notes for a study of fertility

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    Darwin and Lotka: two concepts of population

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    Population was the subject of two major conceptual developments in the second quarter of the 20th century. Both were inspired by evolutionary biology. Lotka developed a mathematics of evolution in human and other species by analogy to thermodynamic models. His theory followed demographic practice in treating populations as closed units, commonly macro-scale, and in inferring underlying processes of change from aggregate outcomes. In contrast, the evolutionary synthesis - a collaborative product of research in experimental and population genetics, natural history, and related fields of biology - followed Darwin in insisting that close observation of small-scale population processes and local environments is necessary to understand population change. Because gene-environment interactions rely on expanding and contracting networks of individuals, the populations in question are by nature open. Despite the apparent conflict between these positions, the synthesis broke new ground in the history of population throught by showing how the two approaches could be combined. Demography, however, moved away from evolutionary and population biology as a source of theory in the early post-war era, and this conceptual redevelopment of population was scarcely remarked upon. More recently, the tremendous development of genetics has recalled demographers' attention to evolutionary theory as an inescapable element of modern population thought. This paper provides a historical introduction to mid-20th-century developments in Darwinian population thinking, and the implications of its dual conceptualisation of population for demography. Its potential importance extends beyond the problem of gene-environment interactions to many aspects of social network analysis

    Darwin and Lotka

    No full text
    Population was the subject of two major conceptual developments in the second quarter of the 20th century. Both were inspired by evolutionary biology. Lotka developed a mathematics of evolution in human and other species by analogy to thermodynamic models. His theory followed demographic practice in treating populations as closed units, commonly macro-scale, and in inferring underlying processes of change from aggregate outcomes. In contrast, the evolutionary synthesis – a collaborative product of research in experimental and population genetics, natural history, and related fields of biology – followed Darwin in insisting that close observation of small-scale population processes and local environments is necessary to understand population change. Because gene-environment interactions rely on expanding and contracting networks of individuals, the populations in question are by nature open. Despite the apparent conflict between these positions, the synthesis broke new ground in the history of population thought by showing how the two approaches could be combined. Demography, however, moved away from evolutionary and population biology as a source of theory in the early post-war era, and this conceptual redevelopment of population was scarcely remarked upon. More recently, the tremendous development of genetics has recalled demographers’ attention to evolutionary theory as an inescapable element of modern population thought. This paper provides a historical introduction to mid-20th-century developments in Darwinian population thinking, and the implications of its dual conceptualisation of population for demography. Its potential importance extends beyond the problem of gene-environment interactions to many aspects of social network analysis.biodemography, Darwin, evolutionary theory, fertility, history of population theories, history of population thought, Lotka, social networks
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