ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES OF ADAPTATION
A. Overview
From the standpoint of cultural ecology, there is a direct relationship between
the ways in which people adapt to the environment (their means of extracting
energy from the environment) and the correspondent level of complexity in
socio-political organization. The major broad categories of societal types
are based on this relationship:
1. hunting &
gathering (band level of socio-political organization);
2. horticultural
& pastoral (village/tribal as well as chiefdom levels of socio-political
organization);
3. peasant agricultural
societies (historically, rural, supportive component of larger state level
forms of socio-political organization);
4. industrial and
post-industrial levels of socio-political organization with correspondent
impact of global processes of socio-economic change on all societies today.
B. Key features
of Systems Approach to Human Adaptation (from Wilson 1999:22-32)
1. Superstructure - Ideology (cognized environment,
cosmology, Ultimate Sacred Postulates); Ritual & leadership/policy
decisions
2. Structure - Domestic Economy (household,
local settlement); Social Organization (rules, patterns, behavior
related to kinship & marriage, gender relations etc. including structure
of groups present); Political Economy (forms of exchange--reciprocity,
redistribution, market exchange; territorial & boundary markers)
3. Infrastructure - Includes mode of production (form of
subsistence--e.g., hunting and gathering); settlement pattern (number, density,
permanence, size etc. of sites); and mode of reproduction (pop. size, sex
ratio, fertility, mortality, pop. controls etc). Can
also be described in terms of
Eco-system
(carrying capacity- population that can be sustained with a given technology),
has three major components:
a. resource base (within relevant
environment)
b. productive tools &
techniques (level of technology)
c. productive knowledge ('know-how'
about environment etc.)
Social
Instrumentalities (consequences of ecosystem on social organization)
a. the density and spatial distribution of the population;
b. the structure and composition of work groups; and
c. the rights to the means of production (who
has them as well as what the "rights" encompass).