Height and integration in proximity networks among Tanzanian Hadza men

Author:

Fedurek Piotr12ORCID,Danel Dariusz2,Aktipis Athena3,Berbesque J. Colette1ORCID,Cronk Lee4,Makambi E. Jerryson5,Lehmann Julia1,Mabulla Ibrahim6,Koziel Slawomir27

Affiliation:

1. School of Human and Life Sciences Roehampton University London England UK

2. Hirszfeld Institute of Immunology and Experimental Therapy Polish Academy of Sciences Wroclaw Poland

3. Department of Psychology Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

4. Department of Anthropology Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USA

5. Mount Meru Tour Guide and International Language School Arusha Tanzania

6. National Museums of Tanzania Dar es Salaam Tanzania

7. Department of Preclinical Sciences, Pharmacology and Medical Diagnostics, Faculty of Medicine Wroclaw University of Sciences and Technology Wroclaw Poland

Abstract

AbstractIn recent years there has been much interest in investigating the extent to which social status or prestige are related to an individual's degree of integration in social networks. It has been shown that, among hunter‐gatherers, social characteristics of an individual based on social status or prestige, such foraging reputation, friendship popularity, and pro‐social reputation, can influence the extent to which an individual is embedded in a social network. However, little is known regarding the extent to which height, a physical trait that in Western societies is often associated with social status, is associated in integration in social networks among small‐scale hunter gatherers. Here, we investigated the relationship between height and a position an individual occupies in proximity networks among Hadza men (n = 30), hunter‐gatherers living in Northern Tanzania. The results of our study show that height is not related to the position an individual maintains in proximity networks. We argue that, in a relatively egalitarian small‐scale hunter‐gatherer societies such as the Hadza, social interactions driving proximity networks might be influenced by social traits, such as popularity and hunting reputation, rather than physical traits, such as height.

Funder

Leakey Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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