Ecological Anthropology - History of The Domain and Leading Researchers

History of The Domain and Leading Researchers

In the 1960s, ecological anthropology first appeared as a response to cultural ecology, a sub-field of anthropology led by Julian Steward. Steward focused on studying different modes of subsistence as methods of energy transfer and then analyzed how they determine other aspects of culture. Culture became the unit of analysis. The first ecological anthropologists explored the idea that humans as ecological populations should be the unit of analysis, and culture became the means by which that population alters and adapts to the environment. It was characterised by systems theory, functionalism and negative feedback analysis.

Benjamin S. Orlove has noted that the development of ecological anthropology has occurred in stages. “Each stage is a reaction to the previous one rather than merely an addition to it”. The first stage concerns the work of Julian Steward and Leslie White, the second stage is titled ‘neofunctionalism’ and/or ‘neoevolutionism,’ and the third stage is termed ‘processual ecological anthropology'. During the first stage, two different models were developed by both White and Steward. “The distinction is not as rigid as some critics have made it out to be, White’s models of cultural evolution were unilinear and monocausal, whereas Steward admitted a number of different lines of cultural development and a number of different causal factors. During the second stage, it was noted that the later group agreed with Steward and White, while the other disagreed. ‘Neoevolutionists’ borrowed from the work of Charles Darwin. The general approach suggested that “evolution is progressive and leads towards new and better forms in succeeding periods”. ‘Neofunctionalists’ “see the social organization and culture of specific populations as functional adaptations which permit the populations to exploit their environments successfully without exceeding their carrying capacity”. ‘Processual ecological anthropology’ is noted to be new. Studies based on this approach “seek to overcome the split in the second stage of ecological anthropology between excessively short and long time scales”. The approach more specifically, examines “shifts and changes in individual and group activities, and they focus on the mechanism by which behavior and external constraints influence each other".

One of the leading practitioners within this sub-field of anthropology was Roy Rappaport. He delivered many outstanding works on the relationship between culture and the natural environment in which it grows, especially concerning the role of ritual in the processual relationship between the two. He conducted the majority, if not all, of his fieldwork amongst a group known as the Maring, who inhabit an area in the highlands of Papua New Guinea.

Patricia K. Townsend's work highlights the difference between ecological anthropology and environmental anthropology. In her view, some anthropologists use both terms in an interchangeable fashion. She states that, “Ecological anthropology will refer to one particular type of research in environmental anthropology – field studies that describe a single ecosystem including a human population”. Studies conducted under this sub-field “frequently deal with a small population of only a few hundred people such as a village or neighbourhood”.

Read more about this topic:  Ecological Anthropology

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