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  2. Nurture kinship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nurture_kinship

    The term "nurture kinship" may have been first used in the present context by Watson (1983), [5] who contrasted it with "nature kinship" (kinship concepts built upon shared substance of some kind). Since the 1970s, an increasing number of ethnographies have documented the extent to which social ties in various cultures can be understood to be ...

  3. Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_bonding_and_nurture...

    Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship: Compatibility between Cultural and Biological Approaches is a book on human kinship and social behavior by Maximilian Holland, published in 2012. The work synthesizes the perspectives of evolutionary biology , psychology and sociocultural anthropology towards understanding human social bonding and cooperative ...

  4. Kinship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinship

    The concept of nurture kinship highlights the extent to which kinship relationships may be brought into being through the performance of various acts of nurture between individuals. Additionally the concept highlights ethnographic findings that, in a wide swath of human societies, people understand, conceptualize and symbolize their ...

  5. List of matrilineal or matrilocal societies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_matrilineal_or_ma...

    "Matrilineal" means kinship is passed down through the maternal line. [1] The Akans of Ghana, West Africa, are Matrilineal. Akans are the largest ethnic group in Ghana. They are made of the Akyems or Akims, Asantes, Fantis, Akuapims, Kwahus, Denkyiras, Bonos, Akwamus, Krachis, etc.

  6. Inclusive fitness in humans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusive_fitness_in_humans

    The nurture kinship perspective on the ontology of social ties, and how people conceptualize them, has become stronger in the wake of David M. Schneider's influential Critique of the Study of Kinship and Holland's subsequent Social Bonding and Nurture Kinship: Compatibility between Cultural and Biological approaches, demonstrating that as well ...

  7. Niece and nephew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nieces_and_nephews

    In the lineal kinship system used in the English-speaking world, a niece or nephew is a child of an individual's sibling or sibling-in-law. A niece is female and a nephew is male, and they would call their parents' siblings aunt or uncle. The gender-neutral term nibling has been used in place of the common terms, especially in specialist ...

  8. Patrilocal residence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrilocal_residence

    In social anthropology, patrilocal residence or patrilocality, also known as virilocal residence or virilocality, are terms referring to the social system in which a married couple resides with or near the husband's parents.

  9. Matrilateral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrilateral

    The term matrilateral describes kin (relatives) "on the mother's side".. Social anthropologists have underlined that even where a social group demonstrates a strong emphasis on one or other line of inheritance (matrilineal or patrilineal), relatives who fall outside this unilineal grouping will not simply be ignored.