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TitleSocio-spatial organization and decision making processes: Observations from the Chipewyan
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1988
AuthorsJarvenpa, R., & Brumbach H. J.
Volume90
Issue3
Pagination598-618
PublisherAmerican Anthropologist
Publication Languageen
Keywordsadaptation to resources, Amerindians, Canada, Chipewyan, Communal space, community, concentrated settlement, ecology, family, fishing, fur, geographical mobility, habitat, hunter-gatherers, hunting, hunting space, Morphological source materials in ethnology, mutual aid, Nomadism, North America, resources, Saskatchewan, scattered settlement, season, seasonal encampment, Seasonal settlement, Seasonal variation, social organization, social relations, space, space organization, summer, technology, trade, winter
Abstract

This article is broadly concerned with the spatial or locational principles governing hunter-gatherer society. Toward this end, the settlement-community hierarchy of the southern Chipewyan Indians is interpreted as a framework for resolving the conflicting advantages and disadvantages of nucleation and dispersion, for regulating information flow, and for maintaining organizational flexibility and options in decision making. Recent ethnoarcheological research reveals a sociospatial organization based on three recurring stages or phases: (1) concentrated summer band, (2) winter staging community, and (3) dispersed winter hunting encampment. Parallels with other Northeastern Athapaskan groups are noted, and the issue of cultural syncretism in sociospatial forms is raised.

Locational Keywords

subarctic Canada

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/481878351

Group

CEMA

Citation Key24648

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