Intro to anthropology chapter 11 definitions

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24 Terms

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economy

A cultural adaptation to the environment that enables a group of humans to use the available land, resources, and labor to satisfy their needs and to thrive

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food foragers

Humans who subsist by hunting, fishing, and gathering plants to eat

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pastorialism

A strategy for food production involving the domestication and herding of animals

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horticulture

The cultivation of plants for subsistence through nonintensive use of land and labor

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agriculture

An intensive farming strategy for food production involving permanently cultivated land to create a surplus

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industrial agriculture

Intensive farming practices involving mechanization and mass production of foodstuffs

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reciprocity

The exchange of resources, goods, and services among people of relatively equal status to create and reinforce social ties

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redistribution

A form of exchange in which accumulated wealth is collected from the members of the group and reallocated in a different pattern

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colonialism

The practice by which states extend political, economic, and military power beyond their own borders over an extended period of time to secure access to raw materials, cheap labor, and markets in other countries or regions

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triangle trade

The extensive exchange of enslaved people, sugar, cotton, and furs between Europe, Africa, and the Americas that transformed economic, political, and social life on both sides of the Atlantic

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industrial revolution

The eighteenth and nineteenth century shift from agriculture and artisanal skill craft to machine-based manufacturing

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modernization theories

Post-World War II economic theories that predicted that with the end of colonialism, less-developed countries would follow the same trajectory toward modernization as the industrialized countries

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development

Post-World War II strategy of wealthy nations to spur global economic growth, alleviate poverty, and raise living standards through strategic investment in national economies of former colonies

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dependency theory

A critique of modernization theory arguing that despite the end of colonialism, the underlying economic relations of the modern world economic system had not changed

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neocolonialism

A continued pattern of unequal economic relations between former colonial states and former colonies despite the formal end of colonial political and military control

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underdevelopment

The term used to suggest that poor countries are poor as a result of their relationship to an unbalanced global economic system

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core countries

Industrialized former colonial states that dominate the world economic system

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periphery countries

The least developed and least powerful nations; often exploited by the core countries as source of raw materials, cheap labor, and markets

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semiperiphery countries

Nations ranking in between core and periphery countries, with some attributes of the core countries but with less of a central role in the global economy

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fordism

The dominant model of industrial production for much of the twentieth century, based on a social compact between labor, corporations, and government

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flexible accumulation

The increasingly flexible strategies that corporations use to accumulate profits in an era of globalization, enabled by innovative communication and transportation technologies

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neoliberalism

An economic and political worldview that sees the free market as the main mechanism for ensuring economic growth, with a severely restricted role for government

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commodity

A good that can be bought, sold, or exchanged in a market

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commodity chains

The hands an item passes through between producer and consumer