Department of Social Sciences, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California 93407, USA.
Aggress Behav. 2012 May-Jun;38(3):194-207. doi: 10.1002/ab.21420.
This work explores sources of conflict among forager-horticulturalist women in Amazonian Bolivia, and applies life history theory as a tool for understanding competitive and cooperative social networking behaviors among women. In this study, 121 Tsimane women and girls were interviewed regarding current and past disagreements with others in their community to identify categories of contested resources that instigate interpersonal conflicts, often resulting in incidences of social aggression. Analysis of frequency data on quarrels (N = 334) reveals that women target several diverse categories of resources, with social types appearing as frequently as food and mates. It was also found that the focus of women's competition changes throughout the life-course, consistent with the notion that current vs. future reproduction and quantity-quality trade-offs might have different influences on competition and social conflict over resources within women's social networks across different age groups.
这项工作探讨了亚马逊玻利维亚觅食-园艺女性之间冲突的来源,并应用生命史理论作为理解女性之间竞争和合作社会网络行为的工具。在这项研究中,对 121 名 Tsimane 女性和女孩进行了采访,询问了她们目前和过去在社区中与他人的分歧,以确定引发人际冲突的有争议资源类别,这些冲突通常会导致社会侵犯事件。对争吵频率数据(N=334)的分析表明,女性针对的资源类别多种多样,社会类型与食物和配偶一样常见。研究还发现,女性竞争的焦点在整个生命周期中发生变化,这与以下观点一致:当前与未来的繁殖以及数量-质量权衡可能会对不同年龄组女性社会网络中资源的竞争和社会冲突产生不同的影响。