Results 241 to 250 of about 336,415 (272)
Contributions of inherited mtDNA to longevity: evidence from extended pedigrees with 176 million kinship pairs. [PDF]
Burt SA +6 more
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Integrative linkage and recombination analysis of 25 X-STRs across 7 linkage groups using pedigree-based and SNP-based strategies. [PDF]
Qian J +7 more
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The roughly 130 contributors to this indispensable three-volume set include both established authorities who have already made lasting contributions to Homeric studies and up and coming Homeric scholars who bring fresh insights and ...
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Kinship, a-kinship, anti-kinship: Variation in the logic of kinship situations
Journal of Human Evolution, 1975Abstract Where contrasts between rural/urban, non-industrial/industrial, simple/complex et cetera societies are drawn, a corresponding contrast in the importance of kinship as an organising principle is more or less explicitly implied. Similarly, the weight put upon kinship is assumed to vary inversely with technological and/or social evolution.
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HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 2015
Commentary on Piketty, Thomas. 2014. Capital in the twenty-first century . Translated by Arthur Goldhammer. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University.
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Commentary on Piketty, Thomas. 2014. Capital in the twenty-first century . Translated by Arthur Goldhammer. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University.
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2016
Chapter 20 focuses on kinship in Athenian social life and legal proceedings, especially as illustrated in the Demosthenic corpus. It explains why kinship was important to Athenians (civil and economic status), and how legal rules, combined with norms of age at marriage and gender roles, structured the bilateral kindred and shaped relations with kin and
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Chapter 20 focuses on kinship in Athenian social life and legal proceedings, especially as illustrated in the Demosthenic corpus. It explains why kinship was important to Athenians (civil and economic status), and how legal rules, combined with norms of age at marriage and gender roles, structured the bilateral kindred and shaped relations with kin and
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1993
Abstract Kinship in our own lives gets little conscious attention, perhaps because we take it for granted. Anthropologists first noticed how important it was in cultures other than our own; some sociologist and historians in tum became curi ous about kinship in the Westem world.
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Abstract Kinship in our own lives gets little conscious attention, perhaps because we take it for granted. Anthropologists first noticed how important it was in cultures other than our own; some sociologist and historians in tum became curi ous about kinship in the Westem world.
openaire +2 more sources

