scholarly journals The matrimonial behavior of a rural population in Haute-Vienne, France

Author(s):  
Gian Luigi Mangiapane ◽  
Sergio De Iasio ◽  
Marilena Girotti ◽  
Rosa Boano ◽  
Gilles Boëtsch

Although biodemography prefers to focus on isolated human populations, in our analysis we have considered an opened community, neither culturally nor geographically separated from the nearby communities. The aim of the present study was to reconstruct the degree of consanguinity and assess the level of openness of a certain French population through the observation of its people’s matrimonial behavior. Marriages and, in general, the choice of the partner, are often affected by culture and society which affect, in the end, the community’s genic pool.

Author(s):  
Phillip Fearnside

Deforestation in Brazilian Amazonia destroys environmental services that are important for the whole world, and especially for Brazil itself. These services include maintaining biodiversity, avoiding global warming, and recycling water that provides rainfall to Amazonia, to other parts of Brazil, such as São Paulo, and to neighboring countries, such as Argentina. The forest also maintains the human populations and cultures that depend on it. Deforestation rates have gone up and down over the years with major economic cycles. A peak of 27,772 km2/year was reached in 2004, followed by a major decline to 4571 km2/year in 2012, after which the rate trended upward, reaching 7989 km2/year in 2016 (equivalent to about 1.5 hectares per minute). Most (70%) of the decline occurred by 2007, and the slowing in this period is almost entirely explained by declining prices of export commodities such as soy and beef. Government repression measures explain the continued decline from 2008 to 2012, but an important part of the effect of the repression program hinges on a fragile base: a 2008 decision that makes the absence of pending fines a prerequisite for obtaining credit for agriculture and ranching. This could be reversed at the stroke of a pen, and this is a priority for the powerful “ruralist” voting bloc in the National Congress. Massive plans for highways, dams, and other infrastructure in Amazonia, if carried out, will add to forces in the direction of increased deforestation. Deforestation occurs for a wide variety of reasons that vary in different historical periods, in different locations, and in different phases of the process at any given location. Economic cycles, such as recessions and the ups and downs of commodity markets, are one influence. The traditional economic logic, where people deforest to make a profit by producing products from agriculture and ranching, is important but only a part of the story. Ulterior motives also drive deforestation. Land speculation is critical in many circumstances, where the increase in land values (bid up, for example, as a safe haven to protect money from hyperinflation) can yield much higher returns than anything produced by the land. Even without the hyperinflation that came under control in 1994, highway projects can yield speculative fortunes to those who are lucky or shrewd enough to have holdings along the highway route. The practical way to secure land holdings is to deforest for cattle pasture. This is also critical to obtaining and defending legal title to the land. In the past, it has also been the key to large ranches gaining generous fiscal incentives from the government. Money laundering also makes deforestation attractive, allowing funds from drug trafficking, tax evasion, and corruption to be converted to “legal” money. Deforestation receives impulses from logging, mining, and, especially, road construction. Soybeans and cattle ranching are the main replacements for forest, and recently expanded export markets are giving strength to these drivers. Population growth and household dynamics are important for areas dominated by small farmers. Extreme degradation, where tree mortality from logging and successive droughts and forest fires replace forest with open nonforest vegetation, is increasing as a kind of deforestation, and is likely to increase much more in the future. Controlling deforestation requires addressing its multiple causes. Repression through fines and other command-and-control measures is essential to avoid a presumption of impunity, but these controls must be part of a broader program that addresses underlying causes. The many forms of government subsidies for deforestation must be removed or redirected, and the various ulterior motives must be combated. Industry agreements restricting commodity purchases from properties with illegal deforestation (or from areas cleared after a specified cutoff) have a place in efforts to contain forest loss, despite some problems. A “soy moratorium” has been in effect since 2006, and a “cattle agreement” since 2009. Creation and defense of protected areas is an important part of deforestation control, including both indigenous lands and a variety of kinds of “conservation units.” Containing infrastructure projects is essential if deforestation is to be held in check: once roads are built, much of what happens is outside the government’s control. The notion that the 2005–2012 deforestation slowdown means that the process is under control and that infrastructure projects can be built at will is extremely dangerous. One must also abandon myths that divert efforts to contain deforestation; these include “sustainable logging” and the use of “green” funds for expensive programs to reforest degraded lands rather than retain areas of remaining natural forests. Finally, one must provide alternatives to support the rural population of small farmers. Large investors, on the other hand, can fend for themselves. Tapping the value of the environmental services of the forest has been proposed as an alternative basis for sustaining both the rural population and the forest. Despite some progress, a variety of challenges remain. One thing is clear: most of Brazil’s Amazonian deforestation is not “development.” Trading the forest for a vast expanse of extensive cattle pasture does little to secure the well-being of the region’s rural population, is not sustainable, and sacrifices Amazonia’s most valuable resources.


Genetics ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 129 (3) ◽  
pp. 931-948
Author(s):  
W P Robinson ◽  
A Cambon-Thomsen ◽  
N Borot ◽  
W Klitz ◽  
G Thomson

Abstract The HLA system has been extensively studied from an evolutionary perspective. Although it is clear that selection has acted on the genes in the HLA complex, the nature of this selection has yet to be fully clarified. A study of constrained disequilibrium values is presented that is applicable to HLA and other less polymorphic systems with three or more linked loci, with the purpose of identifying selection events. The method uses the fact that three locus systems impose additional constraints on the range of possible disequilibrium values for any pair of loci. We have thus examined the behavior of the normalized pairwise disequilibrium measures using two locus (D'), and also three locus (D"), constraints on pairwise disequilibria in a three locus system when one of the three loci is under positive selection. The difference between these measures, delta = magnitude of D' - magnitude of D", has a distribution for the two unselected loci differing from that for the selected locus with either of the unselected loci (the hallmark is a high positive value of delta for the two unselected loci). An examination of genetic drift indicates that positive delta values are unlikely to be found in human populations in the absence of selection when recombination is greater than about 0.1%. This measure can thus provide insight into which allele of several linked loci might have been subject to selection. Application of this method to HLA haplotypes from a large French population study (Provinces Francaise) identifies selected alleles on particular haplotypes. Application of a complementary method, disequilibrium pattern analysis also confirms the action of selection on these haplotypes.


Author(s):  
Susan Elizabeth Hough ◽  
Roger G. Bilham

Between 100 B.C. and about A.D. 1600, global populations doubled from around 300 million to more than 600 million people. The second doubling in world population was very much faster. It occurred between 1600 and 1800, when improvements in medicine and living conditions resulted in a dramatic reduction in mortality rates. The third doubling in world population, from 1.2 billion to 2.5 billion was faster still, in the 150 years following 1800—in spite of the occurrence of two world wars. The fourth doubling occurred in less than 40 years, bringing global population in 1990 to more than 5 billion. Although the rate of population increase has slowed, a fifth, and perhaps final, doubling of population in the next 50 years is projected by the United Nations, bringing projected world populations in 2050 to somewhere between 7.6 and 10.6 billion. In the past 200 years, then, we have increased the number of people on our planet by a factor of 10. We might conclude from this that whatever the impact of earthquakes on human history, it may be very different from what we may expect in our future. Neither the rates nor the distributions of large earthquakes have changed appreciably in millions of years, but the risk has grown simply because the sizes of the targets are now so much greater than ever before. Of particular note for the present discussion, the recent tenfold increase in human populations has occurred largely in cities. During the Middle Ages the rural population outnumbered the urban population by about 100 to 1, a ratio that reflected the high risk of communicable disease in cities. Cities were essentially places for the excess rural population to move to, and to die young. Advances in medicine upset the natural mortality of cities that had checked their growth, and urban populations have grown steadily since 1600.


2020 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Bender

Abstract Tomasello argues in the target article that, in generalizing the concrete obligations originating from interdependent collaboration to one's entire cultural group, humans become “ultra-cooperators.” But are all human populations cooperative in similar ways? Based on cross-cultural studies and my own fieldwork in Polynesia, I argue that cooperation varies along several dimensions, and that the underlying sense of obligation is culturally modulated.


Crisis ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 106-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher M. Bloom ◽  
Shareen Holly ◽  
Adam M. P. Miller

Background: Historically, the field of self-injury has distinguished between the behaviors exhibited among individuals with a developmental disability (self-injurious behaviors; SIB) and those present within a normative population (nonsuicidal self-injury; NSSI),which typically result as a response to perceived stress. More recently, however, conclusions about NSSI have been drawn from lines of animal research aimed at examining the neurobiological mechanisms of SIB. Despite some functional similarity between SIB and NSSI, no empirical investigation has provided precedent for the application of SIB-targeted animal research as justification for pharmacological interventions in populations demonstrating NSSI. Aims: The present study examined this question directly, by simulating an animal model of SIB in rodents injected with pemoline and systematically manipulating stress conditions in order to monitor rates of self-injury. Methods: Sham controls and experimental animals injected with pemoline (200 mg/kg) were assigned to either a low stress (discriminated positive reinforcement) or high stress (discriminated avoidance) group and compared on the dependent measures of self-inflicted injury prevalence and severity. Results: The manipulation of stress conditions did not impact the rate of self-injury demonstrated by the rats. The results do not support a model of stress-induced SIB in rodents. Conclusions: Current findings provide evidence for caution in the development of pharmacotherapies of NSSI in human populations based on CNS stimulant models. Theoretical implications are discussed with respect to antecedent factors such as preinjury arousal level and environmental stress.


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