The biogeography and evolution of land ownership

Author:

Haynie Hannah J.1,Kushnick Geoff2,Kavanagh Patrick H.3,Ember Carol R.4,Bowern Claire5,Low Bobbi S.6,Tuff Ty7,Vilela Bruno8,Kirby Kathryn R.910,Botero Carlos A.11,Gavin Michael C.39ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistics University of Colorado Boulder Colorado USA

2. School of Archaeology and Anthropology, Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

3. Department of Human Dimensions of Natural Resources Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA

4. Human Relations Area Files Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

5. Department of Linguistics Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

6. School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

7. Environmental Data Science Innovation and Inclusion Lab (EESIL) NSF Synthesis Center and Earth Lab, CIRES University of Colorado Boulder Colorado USA

8. Institute of Biology, Universidade Federal da Bahia Salvador Bahia Brazil

9. Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History Jena Germany

10. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

11. Department of Integrative Biology University of Texas Austin Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractAimLand ownership norms are well documented and play a central role in social–ecological systems. Yet only recently has the spatial and temporal distribution of land ownership been examined using biogeographical and evolutionary approaches. We incorporate biogeographical and evolutionary modelling to test associations between land ownership and environmental, subsistence and cultural contact predictors.LocationAfrica.TaxonBantu and Bantoid ethnolinguistic groups (73 societies).MethodsBased on ethnographies for 73 societies, we coded land ownership norms as none, group, kin or individual. We paired these data with language phylogenies, and measured phylogenetic and geographical signal and modelled alternative evolutionary trajectories using maximum likelihood methods. We tested the influence of environmental, subsistence and cultural predictors on spatial variation in land ownership, using a multi‐model inference approach based on logistic regression.ResultsBantu land ownership norms likely evolved on a unilinear trajectory (i.e. societies progress or regress along a series of ownership types), but not one requiring consistent increase in exclusivity (i.e. restrictions towards ownership by smaller groups) as suggested by prior theory. Our biogeographical analyses suggest land ownership is more likely where neighbours also own land and resource productivity is predictable. Reliance on agriculture has relatively small effect sizes and low importance in the model.Main ConclusionsWe find support for multiple evolutionary pathways. Lack of resolution may be due to localized horizontal transfer of norms consistent with the influence of neighbours we find from biogeographical analyses. We cannot rule out other untested mechanisms. Although long‐standing theories propose links between subsistence practices and land ownership, our results suggest subsistence plays only a modest role. Our results also support resource defensibility theory (i.e. land ownership is more likely where environmental productivity is predictable). Overall, we demonstrate the value of combining analytical approaches from evolution and biogeography to test hypotheses on the spatial and temporal variation of human cultural traits.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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