Uncertainty in a globalizing world. Livelihood and fertility variance increases in response to rapid change

Author:

Kramer Karen L.1ORCID,Hackman Joseph V.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThe extreme condition that we address in this special issue is how people adapt to rapid change, which in this case study is instigated by globalization and the process of market integration. Although market integration has been underway for centuries in some parts of the world, it often occurs precipitously in small‐scale societies, initiating an abrupt break with traditional ways of life and fostering a keen sense of uncertainty.MethodsUsing cross sections from 30‐years of data collected in a Yucatec Maya subsistence farming community, we test the expectation that when payoffs to pursue new livelihood and reproductive options are uncertain, variance in social, economic, and reproductive traits will increase in the population. Our data span the transition from subsistence farming to a mixed economy, and bridge the transition from natural to contracepting fertility. Exposure to globalizing and market forces occurred when a paved road was built in the early 2000s.ResultsWe find that livelihood traits (a household's primary economic strategy, amount of land under cultivation, amount of maize and honey sold), become more variable as new, but uncertain options become available. Variance in levels of education and family size likewise immediately increase following the road, but show signs of settling back down a decade later. Rather than replacing one way of life with another, Maya farmers conservatively adopt some new elements (family planning, wage labor), until the tradeoffs to commit to smaller families and the labor market become clearer.ConclusionOur findings highlight that in rapidly changing environments when the payoffs to assimilate new options are uncertain, some households and individuals intensify what they know best, while others adopt new opportunities, driving variance up in the population.

Funder

Harvard University

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

University of Utah

Stony Brook University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Anthropology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Anatomy

Reference59 articles.

1. Does women's education affect fertility? Evidence from pre-demographic transition Prussia

2. The cultural and environmental contexts of small‐scale societies;Borgerhoff Mulder M.;Annual Review of Anthropology,2009

3. Phenotypic diversity as an adaptation to environmental uncertainty;Donaldson‐Matasci M. C.;Evolutionary Ecology Research,2008

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