Risky Transactions: Trust, Kinship, and Ethnicity

Portada
Frank K. Salter
Berghahn Books, 2002 - 304 pàgines

Trust is a central feature of relationships within the Mafia, oppressed minorities, kin groups everywhere, among dissidents, nationalist freedom fighters, ethnic tourists, ethnic middlemen, exchange networks of Kalahari Bushmen, and families subjected to Stalinist social control. Each of these types of trust is examined by a leading scholar and compared with the expectations of neo-Darwinian theory, in particular the theories of kin selection and ethnic nepotism. The result is a fascinating, theoretically focused yet empirically eclectic contribution to the overlapping fields of human ethnology, evolutionary psychology, and bio-politics. The common thread uniting these diverse phenomena is a trusting relationship predicated on altruism. Chapters examine the strengths and limits of human trust under various stressers and temptations to defect.

By exploring the relationship between kin and ethnic altruism and showing its sensitivity to culture, Risky Transactions recasts the evolutionary approach to ethnicity as a blend of primordial and instrumental factors.

 

Continguts

Questions raised by ethology
3
Risky business illicit and licit
8
A foragers dilemma 21
21
Theoretical modelling
47
Evidence for a kin selection heuristic
71
Mafia and blood symbolism
109
Cognitive and classificatory foundations of trust and informal
129
The Romanian case
145
Strategies for mitigating risk among Jewish groups
151
Ethnicity transactional risk of HIV and male homosexual
175
Dialect sex and risk effects on judges questioning of counsel in
189
An evolutionary view
219
The riskmitigating role of
243
Subject Index
291
Name Index
297
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Sobre l'autor (2002)

Frank K. Salter is a Researcher at the Max-Planck-Institute for Behavioral Physiology and the Center for Human Sciences, University of Munich.

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