Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 31, Issue 4 , Pages 246-258, July 2010

Cooperative pastoral production — the importance of kinship

  • Marius Warg Næss

      Affiliations

    • Department of Archaeology and Social Anthropology, Faculty of Humanities, Social Sciences and Education, University of Tromsø, 9037 Tromsø, Norway
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author.
  • ,
  • Bård-Jørgen Bårdsen

      Affiliations

    • Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA), Arctic Ecology Department, Polar Environmental Centre, 9296 Tromsø, Norway
  • ,
  • Per Fauchald

      Affiliations

    • Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA), Arctic Ecology Department, Polar Environmental Centre, 9296 Tromsø, Norway
    • Department of Biology, Faculty of Science and Technology, University of Tromsø, 9037 Tromsø, Norway
  • ,
  • Torkild Tveraa

      Affiliations

    • Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA), Arctic Ecology Department, Polar Environmental Centre, 9296 Tromsø, Norway

Received 4 September 2009; accepted 6 December 2009. published online 04 February 2010.

Abstract 

While there is a general assumption that labour has a positive effect on pastoral production, studies that have quantified this relationship have been characterized by ambiguous results. This is most likely related to the fact that possible cooperative pastoral production has been little explored in the literature, although it is well documented that nomadic pastoralist households share and exchange labour in so-called cooperative herding groups. Consequently, this study aims at investigating possible cooperative labour-related effects on production among Saami reindeer herders in Norway by using kinship relations as a proxy for cooperation. This study found that cooperative labour investment is important for Saami reindeer herders, but that the effect of kinship and labour needs to be understood in relation to each other. When assessing the effect of labour and kinship simultaneously, both labour and genealogical relationship had positive effects on herd size. We also found a positive interaction between kinship and labour suggesting that high levels of relatedness coupled with a large potential labour pool had an increasingly positive effect on herd size.

Keywords: Nomadic pastoralism, Labour, Production, Cooperation, Rangifer tarandus, Saami reindeer husbandry, Tragedy of the commons, Negative density dependence

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 The present study is part of the Ecosystem Finnmark project and was funded by the Research Council of Norway (the FRIMUF program).

PII: S1090-5138(09)00132-9

doi:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2009.12.004

Evolution & Human Behavior
Volume 31, Issue 4 , Pages 246-258, July 2010