Chapter 8 Economics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DEVELOPING A GLOBAL VISION
Advertisements

In Functionalist sociology this process involves preparing children for adult role relationships in the workplace and wider society Secondary Socialisation.
Chapter 4 Social Structure
Making a Living Adaptive Strategies Foraging Cultivation Pastoralism
Chapter 16 Making a Living
Chapter 4 section 3: TYPES OF SOCIETIES
Women and Work. Aspects of Making a Living  Managing resources  Managing Labor  Production  Distribution.
Economic Systems and Forms of Exchange. Economic systems Production and allocation of material goods and services Do not operate independently of other.
Economies and Their Modes of Production. Copyright © Pearson Education Canada 2004 The KEY Questions n What are the characteristics of the five major.
Diversity and Difference in Economic Activities People and their things.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Economic Systems The Allocation of Resources The Conversion of Resources The Distribution.
CHAPTER 19 Economic Systems.
Economic Systems and Forms of Exchange. Economic systems Production and allocation of material goods and services Do not operate independently of other.
Lesson Objectives: By the end of this lesson you will be able to: *Identify the three key economic questions that all societies must answer. *Analyze.
Chapter 6 Economics. Chapter Outline Ultimate Dictator Economic Behavior Allocating Resources Organizing Labor Distribution: Systems of Exchange and Consumption.
systems for producing, distributing and consuming goods and services.
CHAPTER 36 Venture Capital.  Some investors and investment companies focus on financing new small business ventures that have the potential earn a great.
Building Blocks of Social Structure Chapter 4 – Section 1.
Economics. Economics What is Economics? is the study of how we produce and distribute our wealth.
MICROECONOMICS  Concerned with “the behavior and activities of specific economics units- individuals, households, firms, industries, and resource owners.”
Anthropology 330 Economic Systems. What is an Economic System? DEFINITION: An economic system is the abstract, learned, shared rules/templates/patterns.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Sex, Gender, and Culture Gender Concepts Physique and Physiology Gender Roles.
Chapter 8 Economic Systems. Economic System A means of producing, distributing, and consuming goods. All systems have: –Production –Exchange –Consumption.
Economics. Economics  Economic system – part of society that deals with production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services  Tools used.
Essentials of Economics Three Basic Economic Questions Think About It……. If you were starting an economy from the beginning, what questions would need.
Types of Societies. What is a Society? Society: people living within defined territorial borders. a society meets its members’ needs for food shelter.
Chapter 8 Sex and Gender.
Chapter 6: Production & Exchange Objectives:  Identify and describe the four modes of subsistence  Distinguish between the three systems of exchange.
Chapter 8, Economics Key Terms. Economic system Norms governing production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services within a society. Economics.
Chapter 7 Economics. Chapter Outline  Economic Systems  Production  Distribution : Systems of Exchange.
Economic Systems: Concepts and Definitions IB Anthropology UWC Costa Rica.
Chapter 9 Marriage and the Family. What We Will Learn  Is the family found in all cultures?  What functions do family and marriage systems perform?
Unit 2B: Economics What is reciprocity? How do various cultures use it?
Chapter 4 Social Structure and Social Interaction.
OUTLINE NOTES CH. 17 ECONOMICS. ECONOMICS Economics- how people make their livings, earn & spend $, trade with one another and invest in their future.
Pastoral Societies Navajo Quechua. Pastoralism Areas unsuitable for agriculture Nomadic or semi-nomadic –Transhumance – some move with animals –Nomadism.
Chapter 8 Economics. What We Will Learn  How do anthropologists study economic systems cross-culturally?  How do people use culture to help them adapt.
Types of Societies Chapter 4, section 3 Pgs
Chapter 4 section 3: TYPES OF SOCIETIES
Social Structure and Society
INT 200: Global Capitalism and its Discontents From the Neolithic Revolution to the Ancient Near East.
Exchange and Economic Systems
Chapter 8- Economics Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such as land allocated.
Chapter 8 Economics.
Economics – Exchange Systems Production, consumption, and exchange Sall-scale “moral economies” vs. Western economics –Reciprocity & redistribution vs.
Economic Systems ► Economists have identified 3 basic kinds of economic systems. ► 1. Traditional Economy ► 2. Command Economy ► 3. Market Economy.
Economic Systems Economic Systems Objective 2.01 Compare different types of economic systems: traditional, free enterprise, command and mixed.
Economic Systems Part II. Modes of Distributing Goods 1. Reciprocity: the exchange of goods and services, of approximately equal value, between two parties.
Unit Two Economics in Louisiana. Economics is the study of the producing, disturbing, and consuming of goods and services. A person who studies the economy.
Chapter 2. A. A shortage of resources used to satisfy the wants and needs B. Basic economic problem for any society is how to manage its resources. C.
INT 200: Global Capitalism and its Discontents From the Neolithic Revolution to the Ancient Near East and Ancient Greece.
Social Dynamics Functionalism continued The example of Malinowski Conflict dynamics.
Chapter 7 Economics/Systems of Exchange Unit 3.2 Introduction Economics Systems of Exchange Connections to DJH and other ethnographies.
#5 Theme in TJ Economic Organization and the Environment Dobe Ju Hoansi: Subsistence C4 and Change C12 The Ju/Hoansi Today: focus on Changes to Subsistence/Economics.
Economics It’s All About the Stuff…Sort Of. Economic and Anthropology NOT the same as in Economics Classes NOT the same as in Economics Classes Begins.
IR306 FOREIGN POLICY ANALYSIS INTERDEPENDENCE IN INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM - LIBERALISM.
Making a Living Nanda, Chapter 5. Culture is Patterned… Humans have needs in common: Food Water Shelter Humans Have Resources in Common: Ecology Environment.
Economic Behavior and Reciprocity Adam Bartley Simeon Neisler Erik Kvenlog Kendall.
ECONOMIC ANTHROPOLOGY
What is reciprocity? How do various cultures use it?
ECONOMIC ANTHROPOLOGY
Chapter 18 Economic Systems.
ECONOMIC ANTHROPOLOGY
Essentials of Economics
Chapter 9 Marriage and the Family
Chapter 8 Economic Systems 1.
Economic Systems Part I.
Chapter 6 Economics.
Social Structure and Society
Economic Systems and Culture
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 8 Economics

What We Will Learn How do anthropologists study economic systems cross-culturally? How do people use culture to help them adapt to their environment? How are resources such as land and property allocated in different cultures? What principles of distribution are used in various parts of the world?

Focus of Economics Production Distribution Consumption

Economic Anthropology Economics focuses on production, distribution, and consumption within the industrialized world. Economic anthropology studies production, distribution, and consumption comparatively in all societies of the world, industrialized and nonindustrialized.

Formal Economic Theorists Those economic anthropologists who suggest that the ideas of Western economics can be applied to any economic situation.

Question The sub-discipline of ________ studies production, distribution, and consumption comparatively in all societies of the world, industrialized and non-industrialized alike. economic anthropology cultural anthropology applied anthropology material culture

Answer: a The sub-discipline of economic anthropology studies production, distribution, and consumption comparatively in all societies of the world, industrialized and non-industrialized alike.

Cross-cultural Examination of Economic Systems Regulation of resources: How land, water, and natural resources are controlled and allocated. Production: How material resources are converted into usable commodities. Exchange: How the commodities are distributed among the people of the society.

Allocation of Resources Individual property rights are strongly valued and protected in the United States, but in some parts of the world they are more loosely defined.

Pastoralists and Resources Because this group of East African pastoralists treats land as belonging to everyone in the society, you are not likely to find any “No Trespassing” signs here.

Kikuyu and Resources During the colonial period in Kenya, the British failed to understand that land among the Kikuyu was allocated according to lineage membership and had much more than mere economic importance.

Property Rights Western concept of individual ownership (an idea unknown to some non-Western cultures) in which a large kinship group, instead of the individual, determines limited rights to property.

Universalism Rewarding people on the basis of some universally applied set of standards.

Particularism The propensity to deal with other people based on one’s particular relationship to them rather than according to a universally applied set of standards.

Production A process whereby goods are obtained from the natural environment and altered to become consumable goods for society.

Religion and Food Production In Hindu India the cow is sacred and never killed for food. This is an excellent example of how a religiously based food prohibition can be economically rational as well.

Division of Labor Deciding which types of people will perform which categories of work. Every society, whether large or small, distinguishes between the work appropriate for men and women and for adults and children.

Gender Specialization Women generally tend crops, gather wild foods, care for children, prepare food, clean house, fetch water, and collect cooking fuel. Men usually hunt, build houses, clear land for cultivation, herd large animals, fish, trap small animals, and serve as political functionaries.

Theories of Gender Specialization Because men have greater body mass and strength, they are better equipped physically to engage in hunting, warfare, and land clearing. Women do tasks that are compatible with child care. In terms of reproduction, men tend to be more expendable than women.

Age Specialization usually become involved in work activities at a considerably earlier age. According to a study by the U.S. Department of Labor, approximately 250 million children between the ages of 5 and 14 work throughout Asia, Africa, and Latin America, and of these, nearly half work full-time.

Child Labor These Pakistani children are working full time in an embroidery shop for pennies a day rather than going to school. According to the International Labor Organization, there were 246 million children between the ages of 5 and 17 in the workforce worldwide in 2002.

Durkheim and Division of Labor Two types of societies Mechanical solidarity - societies with a minimum of labor specialization. Organic solidarity - highly specialized societies, solidarity is based on mutual interdependence.

Question Whether based simply on gender and age, or more complex reasons, all societies have established ________ to allocate tasks. divisions of labor divisions of gender age set categories hierarchical roles

Answer: a Whether based simply on gender and age, or more complex reasons, all societies have established divisions of labor to allocate tasks.

Question Lack of knowledge and physical strength may be a reason for ________ division of labor. gender age specialization hierarchical

Answer: b Lack of knowledge and physical strength may be a reason for age division of labor.

Question The term ________ refers to social solidarity resulting from increased labor specialization and mutual interdependence. labor solidarity organic solidarity social solidarity mechanical solidarity

Answer: b The term organic solidarity refers to social solidarity resulting from increased labor specialization and mutual interdependence.

Modes of Distribution Reciprocity - The exchange of goods and services of roughly equal value between two trading partners. Redistribution -Goods and services are given to a central authority and reallocated to the people according to a new pattern. Market exchange - Involves the use of standardized currencies to buy and sell goods and services.

Three Kinds of Reciprocity Generalized - involves giving a gift without any expectation of immediate return. Balanced - exchange of goods and services with the expectation that equivalent value will be returned within a specific period of time. Negative - exchange of goods and services between equals in which the parties try to gain an advantage.

Redistribution Goods are given to a central authority and then given back to the people in a new pattern. Redistribution involves two distinct stages: An inward flow of goods and services to a social center. An outward dispersal of these goods and services back to society.

Big Men/big Women Self-made leaders, found widely in Melanesia and New Guinea, who convince their followers to contribute excess food to provide feasts for the followers of other big men or big women.

Silent Trade A form of trading found in some small-scale societies in which the trading partners avoid face-to-face contact.

Kula Ring A form of reciprocal trading found among the Trobriand Islanders involving the use of white shell necklaces and red shell bracelets.

Trading These shell necklaces and bracelets have been used for generations to facilitate trade among the Trobriand Islands.

Bridewealth The transfer of goods from the groom’s lineage to the bride’s lineage to legitimize marriage.

Potlatch A form of competitive giveaway found among Native Americans from the Northwest Coast that serves as a mechanism for both achieving social status and distributing goods.

Potlatch Tlingit dancers in Alaska pose in traditional ceremonial attire (circa 1895) during a potlatch ceremony, which serves as a mechanism for allocating social status and distributing goods.

Market Exchange A form of distribution in which goods and services are bought and sold and their value is determined by supply and demand. Standardized currency (money) A medium of exchange that has well-defined and understood value. Barter Direct exchange of commodities between people that does not involve currency.

Question _______ refers to how commodities are distributed among the people of a society. The regulation of resources Allocation of resources Production Exchange

Answer: d Exchange refers to how commodities are distributed among the people of a society.

Informal Economy This man selling goods on the streets of New York City illustrates the informal economy operating in the United States.

Globalization Since the 1980s the economies of the world have become globalized. Tariffs are lowered and trading is deregulated. Increased the gap between the haves and the have-nots.

Globalization Protestors demonstrate against the abuses of globalization at the 1999 meetings of the World Trade Organization in Seattle.