
The Population Dynamics of the Mucajai Yanomama
- 1st Edition - February 28, 1990
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Author: John Early
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 4 3 3 7 5 4 - 1
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 3 2 3 - 1 6 0 8 2 - 7
The Population Dynamics of the Mucajai Yanomama is an analysis of the Mucajai Yanomama, an Indian foraging/horticultural group located in northern Brazil. The text is an… Read more

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Request a sales quoteThe Population Dynamics of the Mucajai Yanomama is an analysis of the Mucajai Yanomama, an Indian foraging/horticultural group located in northern Brazil. The text is an investigation of the population dynamics of the Yanomama Indians, using methods of quantitative demography and qualitative ethnography. The timeline of text focuses from 1958 to 1987, from their first ever contact with representative of the ""outer world"". The book is divided into four major parts and comprised of a total of 10 chapters. Part One introduces the tribe of the Mucajai Yanomama and discusses their population dynamics, as well as provides an overview of postcontact period of 28 years. Part Two focuses on the demographic issues of the tribe. This part looks into variables, such as fertility, mortality, and migration, to understand factors such as cultural antecedents and age-sex structure. Part Three serves as a synthesis of the demographic variables and their relation to each other. The other issue synthesized in this part of the book is the impact of population structure to the cultural practices of the tribe. Lastly, Part Four provides the conclusion of the study and compares the results to other studies of Yanomama groups. The text is a helpful resource mostly to anthropologists and evolutionary demographers, but can also be a reference to anyone who studies population dynamics.
Illustrations
Tables
Preface
Part One Introduction
1. The Mucajai Yanomama
I. The Research Area
II. The First Permanent Contact
III. Purpose of the Research
IV. Sources of the Mucajai Database
V. Some Editorial Considerations
2. The Population Dynamics of the Precontact Period
I. History of the Yanomama
II. The Mucajai Yanomama
III. Population Dynamics of the Precontact Period
IV. The Population Problem at the Time of Contact
3. Overview of the Postcontact Period, 1958-1987
I. Rate of Growth and Its Components
II. Levels of Analysis and Demographic Indices
III. Terminology
IV. Cultural Factors Responsible for the Demographic Variables and Age-Sex Structure
V. Phases of the Postcontact Period
VI. The Missionaries
Part Two Cultural and Demographic Structures of the Population Variables
4. The Reproductive Period
I. Mating Pattern
II. Female Reproductive Period
III. Types of Birth Intervals and Their Duration
IV. Reproductive Pattern: Age and Overall Levels of Fertility
V. Summary
5. Determination of Age
I. The Anthropological Problem of Age
II. Estimation of Birth Dates from Fertility Histories
III. Evaluation of the Averages as Estimators
IV. Completeness of the Database Used for Fertility Histories
V. Distinctiveness of the Mucajai Database
6. Migration
I. History of Contacts with Other Yanomama Groups in the Postcontact Period
II. Reasons for In-Migration
III. Out-Migration
IV. Net Migration
7. Mortality
I. Infectious Disease
II. Induced Abortion and Infanticide
III. Infant Mortality
IV. Other Causes of Death
V. Yanomama Perception of Cause of Death
VI. Life Expectancy and Group Mortality
Part Three Synthesis
8. How the Population Increased
I. Components of Total Increase
II. Change of Age-Sex Structure of the Population
III. In-Migration as a Key Factor of Change
IV. Raiding and the Sex Ratio
V. Cultural Impact of the Missionaries
VI. Demographic Impact of the Missionaries
VII. Demographic Change without the Missionaries
VIII. Sexual Imbalance in the Precontact Population
IX. Conclusion
9. The Effect of Changed Demographic Structures on Cultural Patterns
I. Change of the Sex Ratio
II. Change of Types of Sexual Unions
III. Mother-in-Law Avoidance
IV. Resources and Population Increase
V. Conclusion
Part Four Conclusion
10. Yanomama Population Dynamics
I. Cultural Patterns
II. Demographic Levels of the Patterns
III. Fertility
IV. Migration
V. Mortality
VI. Stationary or Increasing Population?
VII. Some Implications for Population Research on Small-Scale Anthropological Societies
VIII. The Evolution of Human Population Dynamics
IX. Conclusion
References
Index
- Edition: 1
- Published: February 28, 1990
- No. of pages (eBook): 168
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN: 9780124337541
- eBook ISBN: 9780323160827