Understanding the nature of wealth and its effects on human fitness

Author:

Mulder Monique Borgerhoff1,Beheim Bret A.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, Graduate Group in Ecology, Population Biology Graduate Group, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA

2. Graduate Group in Ecology, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA

Abstract

Studying fitness consequences of variable behavioural, physiological and cognitive traits in contemporary populations constitutes the specific contribution of human behavioural ecology to the study of human diversity. Yet, despite 30 years of evolutionary anthropological interest in the determinants of fitness, there exist few principled investigations of the diverse sources of wealth that might reveal selective forces during recent human history. To develop a more holistic understanding of how selection shapes human phenotypic traits, be these transmitted by genetic or cultural means, we expand the conventional focus on associations between socioeconomic status and fitness to three distinct types of wealth—embodied, material and relational. Using a model selection approach to the study of women's success in raising offspring in an African horticultural population (the Tanzanian Pimbwe), we find that the top performing models consistently include relational and material wealth, with embodied wealth as a less reliable predictor. Specifically, child mortality risk is increased with few household assets, parent nonresidency, child legitimacy, and one or more parents having been accused of witchcraft. The use of multiple models to test various hypotheses greatly facilitates systematic comparative analyses of human behavioural diversity in wealth accrual and investment across different kinds of societies.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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1. Women’s subsistence strategies predict fertility across cultures, but context matters;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2024-02-12

2. Life-History-Theorie;Evolutionäre Verhaltensökologie und Psychopathie;2024

3. Non-kin alloparents and child outcomes: Older siblings, but not godparents, predict educational attainment in a rural context;Evolution and Human Behavior;2023-11

4. Gender disparities in material and educational resources differ by kinship system;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-06-26

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