宗派
亲属关系
食人
中国
饥荒
联营
放牧
发展经济学
经济
谱系学
经济
社会学
地理
历史
政治学
生态学
生物
人类学
法学
林业
人工智能
幼虫
计算机科学
作者
Zhiwu Chen,Lin Zhan,Xiaoming Zhang
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jce.2024.01.003
摘要
Survival cannibalism persisted across human societies until recently. What drove the decline in cannibalism and other forms of violence? Using data from the 1470–1910 period, this paper documents that in historical China, the Confucian clan—an institutionalized kinship network—acted as an informal internal market to facilitate intra-clan resource pooling and risk-sharing, thus reducing the need for cannibalism during times of drought-related famine. The risk mitigation role of the clan remains robust after controlling for economic development and other factors and ruling out alternative channels. Thus, kinship networks and their associated culture contributed to human civilizational development before the advent of formal markets.
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