ANTH 250/223: Indigenous Peoples, the Environment & the Global Economy
January 26, 2004
|
Foragers (hunter-gatherers) |
Pastoralists (herders) |
Horticulturalists (slash-and-burn) |
Agriculturalists (farmers) |
population density |
lowest |
low |
low to moderate |
highest |
community size |
small |
small |
small |
large (towns and cities develop among agriculturalists) |
permanence of settlement |
nomadic or semi-nomadic |
nomadic or semi-nomadic |
more sedentary, though communities may move after several years |
permanent communities |
food shortages |
infrequent |
frequent |
infrequent |
frequent (famine is common) |
leisure time |
most free time |
intermediate amount of free time (varies seasonally) |
intermediate amount of free time (varies seasonally) |
least free time, extremely labor-intensive |
trade |
minimal |
very important |
minimal |
very important |
full-time craft specialists |
none |
some |
none or few |
many (high degree of specialization) |
accumulation of goods |
minimal |
minimal but more than foragers |
more than pastoralists |
extremely high |
wealth differences |
none |
moderate |
generally minimal |
considerable |
political leadership |
informal, decisions through consensus |
part- and full-time political officials |
part- and full-time political officials |
Many full-time political officials, extremely hierarchical |
land requirements |
vast |
vast |
high but less than foragers and pastoralists |
moderate (lower than the others) |
gender oppression |
negligible |
marked |
negligible |
extreme |