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Raising a child doesn't take a village, U-M research shows
University of Michigan ^ | September 12, 2011 | Unknown

Posted on 09/12/2011 3:37:23 PM PDT by decimon

ANN ARBOR, Mich.---It doesn't take a village to raise a child after all, according to University of Michigan research.

"In the African villages that I study in Mali, children fare as well in nuclear families as they do in extended families," said U-M researcher Beverly Strassmann, professor of anthropology and faculty associate at the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR). "There's a naïve belief that villages raise children communally, when in reality children are raised by their own families and their survival depends critically on the survival of their mothers."

Strassmann's recently published studies provide the first empirical data on two theoretical pillars of the belief that it takes a village to raise a child. One of these is the grandmother hypothesis---the idea that a child is more likely to survive if a grandmother is nearby.

The other is cooperative breeding theory, based on animal behavior studies that have shown that in a wide variety of birds, including scrub jays, and many mammals, such as the mongoose, adults may delay their own reproduction to help raise the offspring of others.

"Some researchers have suggested that humans may also be a cooperatively breeding species," said Strassmann, who views human behavior from the perspective of evolutionary biology. "But the evidence I found shows that this is not always the case and there can be quite a lot of competition and coercion within families."

In a study published this summer in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Strassmann analyzed data on child survival in various family structures from her ongoing, 25-year study of the Dogon people of Mali, West Africa, a traditional, agricultural society in which resources are scarce and mortality is high. Like many human groups in the past, Dogon society is patrilineal, with a tight-knit web of kinship established through fathers. The Dogon practice polygyny and do not use contraception; Dogon women give birth to 9 children, on average, over their lifetimes.

Strassmann's study is the only research on the subject to date that is both prospective in nature and that controls for confounding variables, such as family wealth and family structure, that could affect child survival.

In the 1,700 Dogon children she followed, Strassmann found that children were over four times more likely to die by age 5 if their mothers were dead.

"In the Dogon, it is mothers alone who are critical for getting children past the early-life bottleneck in survival," Strassmann said. "Adding an extra adult to the family did not improve a child's survival. Although it's important to note that these findings are about child survival up to age 5, they don't speak to the value of having grandparents later on.

"Children were 52 percent less likely to die if their paternal grandparents were dead. Why? Because in a patrilineal society, the paternal grandparents are likely to live with the child, competing for scarce resources."

In another study, published this summer in Human Nature, Strassmann and ISR researcher Wendy Garrard further investigated the validity of the grandmother hypothesis. This study involved a meta-analysis of published studies done over several centuries in 17 patrilineal societies in Africa, Asia, Europe and North America.

"Our analysis showed that the grandparents who actually lived with their grandchildren did not have a beneficial effect on the grandchildren's survival," Strassmann said. "Grandparents who did not live with the grandchildren sometimes did have a positive effect because they were not competing for scarce resources.

"Cooperative breeding is not the universal, evolved pattern. Instead there is huge diversity in the array of successful family systems in humans. For example, in the U.S., there are a huge proportion of nuclear families and single moms. Certainly many children of single mothers not only survive but thrive. Look at Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.

"Cooperative breeding does help to understand 19th century European societies, for example, in Ireland, where marriage was postponed to the late 20s or even 30s due to the scarcity of farms to inherit. In these societies, celibate individuals often worked on the farms of siblings as helpers and can be compared to cooperatively breeding birds that delay reproduction and act as helpers at their parents' nest when the habitat is saturated and all nest sites are taken. However, cooperative breeding does not fit many other societies, such as the one I study in Africa."

In her study of the Dogon, Strassmann found that children's risk of death is higher in polygynous than in monogamous families. This reflects the hazard of living with unrelated females whose own children are competing with the children of co-wives for limited resources.

Supporting this finding, Strassmann cites "Hamilton's Rule," established by British evolutionary biologist W.D. Hamilton in the 1960s. It is the first formal, mathematical description of kin selection theory, the idea that the degree to which we are willing to invest our resources in another person depends, in part, on the degree of genetic kinship we share with them.

But kinship cuts both ways, according to Strassmann.

"Our results also suggest that kin competition is an important aspect of human family systems," she said. "Genetic conflicts of interest occur even within the family. This competition starts before birth, with maternal genes allocating resources strategically between present and future offspring. The competition extends throughout childhood with sibling rivalry.

"At reproductive maturity, kin compete for the resources needed for mating and parental effort. And finally, in old age, net producers eventually become net consumers who compete with other family members for food and shelter.

"The grandmother hypothesis does not take into account that grandmothers may need help themselves, not just among the groups like the Dogon but in societies like our own."

###

Established in 1949, the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research is the world's largest academic social science survey and research organization, and a world leader in developing and applying social science methodology, and in educating researchers and students from around the world. ISR conducts some of the most widely cited studies in the nation, including the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers, the American National Election Studies, the Monitoring the Future Study, the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, the Health and Retirement Study, the Columbia County Longitudinal Study and the National Survey of Black Americans. ISR researchers also collaborate with social scientists in more than 60 nations on the World Values Surveys and other projects, and the institute has established formal ties with universities in Poland, China and South Africa. ISR is also home to the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, the world's largest digital social science data archive. Visit the ISR website at www.isr.umich.edu for more information.

EDITORS: Watch/download video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=P29h491Z8yQ


TOPICS: History; Society
KEYWORDS: mgoblow; michigan

1 posted on 09/12/2011 3:37:24 PM PDT by decimon
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To: SunkenCiv

Village people ping.

I don’t think we’re as far removed from the Dogon way of life as we’d like to believe.


2 posted on 09/12/2011 3:39:39 PM PDT by decimon
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To: decimon

no. it takes a tv. which is really a “global village.” but whatever.


3 posted on 09/12/2011 3:42:51 PM PDT by the invisib1e hand (...then they came for the guitars, and we kicked their sorry faggot asses into the dust)
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To: decimon

Mrs. Clinton will be shaken upon hearing that it doesn’t take a collective after all.


4 posted on 09/12/2011 3:44:32 PM PDT by frog in a pot (Their bible calls for either our conversion or our death - how and when has that changed ?)
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To: frog in a pot
Mrs. Clinton will be shaken upon hearing that it doesn’t take a collective after all.

"There's a naïve belief that villages raise children communally..."

Ya gotta love it.

5 posted on 09/12/2011 3:49:48 PM PDT by decimon
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To: decimon
... many mammals, such as the mongoose, adults may delay their own reproduction to help raise the offspring of others.

Approximately how do they do that? Do they put on little condoms? Rhythm? Or do they use a more proven method, like Not Doing "It?"

6 posted on 09/12/2011 3:54:52 PM PDT by Cyber Liberty (I like both Perry and Palin, and will vote for whichever of them wins.)
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To: frog in a pot

I do remember Hitlery saying it when I was in grade school. Apparently, we have a new village idiot from Kenya so the study has relevance.


7 posted on 09/12/2011 4:05:37 PM PDT by max americana (FUBO NATION 2012 FK BARAK)
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To: Cyber Liberty

In “Meerkat Manor,” the junior females weren’t supposed to reproduce, because the group was supposed to be dedicated to supporting the offspring of the dominant breeding pair ... but the younger females kept running off with strange males and getting knocked up anyway.

I suspect something similar happens with the mongeese.


8 posted on 09/12/2011 6:07:44 PM PDT by Tax-chick (I welcome our new reptilian overlords. They are so quiet!)
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To: decimon; AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; Bockscar; ColdOne; ...

Thanks decimon. This gets a “No Sh*t” award nomination for the week.


9 posted on 09/12/2011 6:10:46 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (It's never a bad time to FReep this link -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: frog in a pot

If the child knows not if the man is his father or his uncle and if his grand mother gets the checks for him and his 7 cousins and three nephews, it takes the village to provide the checks


10 posted on 09/12/2011 6:26:15 PM PDT by bert (K.E. N.P. +12 ....Rats carry plague)
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To: bert

You are correct, of course. Some are just cut out to live in a collective, and to receive from the others according to their need.


11 posted on 09/12/2011 8:10:23 PM PDT by frog in a pot (Their bible calls for either our conversion or our death - how and when has that changed ?)
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To: Tax-chick
And another beautiful theory is mugged by a bunch of brutal facts. :)
12 posted on 09/12/2011 8:24:15 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Can we ask questions which God finds unanswerable? Easily. All nonsense questions are unanswerable.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
Ascribing volitional control of their reproduction to small animals is pretty silly, if anyone were to think it through. The actual control is that the grandmother kills the babies.

This was an interesting book which examined a number of the (mainly mythological) situations in which it's imagined that collective responsibility substitutes for the key biological bond. Like Margaret Mead's free-loving Samoans, the "studies" are mainly wishful thinking.


13 posted on 09/13/2011 4:14:08 AM PDT by Tax-chick (I welcome our new reptilian overlords. They are so quiet!)
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