The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and Peace

This article focuses on what nomadic forager research suggests about human nature and examines how this ancestral form of human social organization is fundamentally partnership-oriented. Taking mobile forager social organization into consideration is important to partnership studies because all hum...

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Main Authors: Douglas P Fry, Geneviève Souillac
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2017-03-01
Series:Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies
Subjects:
war
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/ijps/article/view/150
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spelling doaj-8fed86b8ccb44014bbd92fa67c5461702020-11-24T23:22:19ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingInterdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies2380-89692017-03-014110.24926/ijps.v4i1.150The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and PeaceDouglas P Fry0Geneviève Souillac1University of Alabama at BirminghamUniversity of Alabama at Birmingham This article focuses on what nomadic forager research suggests about human nature and examines how this ancestral form of human social organization is fundamentally partnership-oriented. Taking mobile forager social organization into consideration is important to partnership studies because all humanity lived as mobile foragers until very recently. The material considered in this article stems from 1) individual forager ethnographies, 2) qualitative comparative forager studies, and 3) research based on systematically sampled forager traits. The findings show the pervasiveness of egalitarianism (including gender equality), socialization and social control mechanism geared toward promoting prosocial behaviors such as sharing and the caring for others, conflict avoidance and resolution mechanisms, and no inclination toward warfare in values or practice. Such patterns that cut across nomadic forager societies from around the world call into question a familiar narrative about the supposedly self-centered, warlike, and hording nature of humanity. Mobile forager studies support an alternative narrative that challenges assumptions about the ‘'primitive versus civilized,’ normative progress and modernity, and biased projections of innate depravity onto all humanity. The article concludes by proposing that our nomadic forager forbearers solved the challenges of survival over evolutionary time not by making war, developing slavery, or ranking people into domination hierarchies of ‘haves’” and ‘have nots’—social institutions with which we are all too familiar today—but rather, our mobile forager ancestors promoted egalitarianism, cooperation, caring and sharing as they developed ways to resolve disputes with a minimum of bloodshed and sidestepped the development of war. https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/ijps/article/view/150human natureprosocial behaviorgender equalitysocial equalitypeacewar
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Douglas P Fry
Geneviève Souillac
spellingShingle Douglas P Fry
Geneviève Souillac
The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and Peace
Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies
human nature
prosocial behavior
gender equality
social equality
peace
war
author_facet Douglas P Fry
Geneviève Souillac
author_sort Douglas P Fry
title The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and Peace
title_short The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and Peace
title_full The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and Peace
title_fullStr The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and Peace
title_full_unstemmed The Original Partnership Societies: Evolved Propensities for Equality, Prosociality, and Peace
title_sort original partnership societies: evolved propensities for equality, prosociality, and peace
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies
issn 2380-8969
publishDate 2017-03-01
description This article focuses on what nomadic forager research suggests about human nature and examines how this ancestral form of human social organization is fundamentally partnership-oriented. Taking mobile forager social organization into consideration is important to partnership studies because all humanity lived as mobile foragers until very recently. The material considered in this article stems from 1) individual forager ethnographies, 2) qualitative comparative forager studies, and 3) research based on systematically sampled forager traits. The findings show the pervasiveness of egalitarianism (including gender equality), socialization and social control mechanism geared toward promoting prosocial behaviors such as sharing and the caring for others, conflict avoidance and resolution mechanisms, and no inclination toward warfare in values or practice. Such patterns that cut across nomadic forager societies from around the world call into question a familiar narrative about the supposedly self-centered, warlike, and hording nature of humanity. Mobile forager studies support an alternative narrative that challenges assumptions about the ‘'primitive versus civilized,’ normative progress and modernity, and biased projections of innate depravity onto all humanity. The article concludes by proposing that our nomadic forager forbearers solved the challenges of survival over evolutionary time not by making war, developing slavery, or ranking people into domination hierarchies of ‘haves’” and ‘have nots’—social institutions with which we are all too familiar today—but rather, our mobile forager ancestors promoted egalitarianism, cooperation, caring and sharing as they developed ways to resolve disputes with a minimum of bloodshed and sidestepped the development of war.
topic human nature
prosocial behavior
gender equality
social equality
peace
war
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/ijps/article/view/150
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