PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Multiple husbands serve as child support and life insurance in some cultures says MU researcher

2012-08-02
(Press-News.org) Marrying multiple husbands at the same time, or polyandry, creates a safety net for women in some cultures, according to a recent study by a University of Missouri researcher. Extra husbands ensure that women's children are cared for even if their fathers die or disappear. Although polyandry is taboo and illegal in the United States, certain legal structures, such as child support payments and life insurance, fill the same role for American women that multiple husbands do in other cultures.

"In America, we don't meet many of the criteria that tend to define polyandrous cultures," said Kathrine Starkweather, doctoral student in MU's Department of Anthropology in the College of Arts and Science. "However, some aspects of American life mirror polyandrous societies. Child support payments provide for offspring when one parent is absent. Life insurance allows Americans to provide for dependents in the event of death, just as secondary husbands support a deceased husband's children in polyandrous societies."

Starkweather and her co-author, Raymond Hames, professor of anthropology at the University of Nebraska, examined 52 cultures with traditions of polyandry from all continents except Europe. They found that similar conditions seemed to influence cultures toward polyandry. Males frequently outnumbered females in these cultures, as a result of high mortality prior to adulthood. Although males out-numbered females, they also were more likely to die in warfare or hunting and fishing accidents or to be absent for other economic reasons. Polyandrous cultures also tended to be small scale and egalitarian.

In approximately half of the cultures studied, the other husbands were closely related to the first husband, a practice with economic repercussions. In previously studied polyandrous cultures, especially those of Nepal, Tibet and India, inheritance traditions called for land to be divided evenly among male offspring after a parent's passing. That practice would have resulted in land being sub-divided into useless parcels too small to provide enough crops to feed a family. However, if several brothers married the same wife, the family farm would stay intact. In the small egalitarian cultures Starkweather studied land and property ownership was unusual. In these societies, younger brothers in the marriage often protected and provided food for the family in the absence of the older brother, who was often the primary husband.

"This research shows that humans are capable of tremendous variability and adaptability in their behaviors," said Starkweather. "Human marriage structures aren't written in stone; throughout history, people have adapted their societal norms to ensure the survival and well-being of their children."

###The study "A Survey of Non-Classical Polyandry" was published in the journal Human Nature. Starkweather conducted the research while at the University of Nebraska – Lincoln.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Early relationships, not brainpower, key to adult happiness

2012-08-02
Positive social relationships in childhood and adolescence are key to adult well-being, according to Associate Professor Craig Olsson from Deakin University and the Murdoch Children's Research Institute in Australia, and his colleagues. In contrast, academic achievement appears to have little effect on adult well-being. The exploratory work, looking at the child and adolescent origins of well-being in adulthood, is published online in Springer's Journal of Happiness Studies. We know very little about how aspects of childhood and adolescent development, such as academic ...

Researcher's fish-eye view could offer insights for human vision

Researchers fish-eye view could offer insights for human vision
2012-08-02
August 2, 2012 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A Purdue University student's research project related to zebrafish eye development could lead to a better understanding of vision problems that affect billions of people worldwide. Zeran Li, as an undergraduate student in biological sciences, led a research team that uncovered an enzyme's role in the regulation of eye size in the fish. If the enzyme's role is similar in human eyes, it could be relevant to human vision problems, such as nearsightedness and farsightedness. "New insights into the process of eye-size control in zebrafish ...

Studying couples to improve health, better relationships

2012-08-02
August 2, 2012 - It is not always best to forgive and forget in marriage, according to new research that looks at the costs of forgiveness. Sometimes expressing anger might be necessary to resolve a relationship problem – with the short-term discomfort of an angry but honest conversation benefiting the health of the relationship in the long-term. The research is part of a larger effort to better understand the contexts in which some relationships succeed and others fail, and also to understand how close relationships affect our health. A popular research trend in recent ...

Timing of antibiotics important in reducing infections after C-section

2012-08-02
Giving antibiotics before cesarean section surgery rather than just after the newborn's umbilical cord is clamped cuts the infection rate at the surgical site in half, according to researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Barnes-Jewish Hospital. "We followed more than 8,000 women over an eight-year period, and our findings support giving antibiotics just before a cesarean section to prevent infections," says infectious disease specialist David K. Warren, MD. "Until recently, standard practice in the U.S. was to give antibiotics when the ...

Fingering the culprit that polluted the Solar System

2012-08-02
Washington, D.C. — For decades it has been thought that a shock wave from a supernova explosion triggered the formation of our Solar System. According to this theory, the shock wave also injected material from the exploding star into a cloud of dust and gas, and the newly polluted cloud collapsed to form the Sun and its surrounding planets. New work from Carnegie's Alan Boss and Sandra Keiser provides the first fully three-dimensional (3-D) models for how this process could have happened. Their work will be published by The Astrophysical Journal Letters. Traces of the ...

Students trading sex for drugs or alcohol happens also in rural B.C.: UBC research

2012-08-02
Just over two percent of teens in rural schools who have ever tried alcohol, marijuana or other drugs report they have also traded sex for these substances, according to University of British Columbia research published today in the Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality. This is the first study to track this issue among rural students. Using 2009 survey data from 2,360 students in Grades 7-12 from 28 schools in B.C.'s East Kootenays, the researchers found equal numbers of boys and girls traded sex, and that up to 98 per cent of them were living at home with family. Conducted ...

UCSB autism researchers find that focusing on strengths improves social skills of adolescents

UCSB autism researchers find that focusing on strengths improves social skills of adolescents
2012-08-02
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– The junior high and high school years are emotionally challenging even under the best of circumstances, but for adolescents with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), that time can be particularly painful. Lacking the social skills that enable them to interact successfully with their peers, these students are often ostracized and even bullied by their classmates. However, a new study conducted by researchers at the Koegel Autism Center at UC Santa Barbara has found that by playing on their strengths –– high intelligence and very specific interests ...

The aging brain is more malleable than previously believed

2012-08-02
There is growing evidence that, beyond what was previously believed, the adult human brain is remarkably malleable and capable of new feats -- even in the last decades of life. In fact, new experiences can trigger major physical changes in the brain within just a few days, and certain conditions can accelerate this physical, chemical and functional remodeling of the brain. "We used to think that the brain was completely formed by development and its basic structure didn't change much in adults, but as research went on we discovered that wasn't true, at least in the ...

Recurring shoulder instability injuries likely among young athletes playing contact sports

2012-08-02
Summer is a peak season for many sports, and with that comes sport-related injuries. Among those injuries is shoulder joint dislocation. According to a literature review in the August 2012 issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, most incidences of shoulder joint instability are the result of traumatic contact injuries like force or falling on an outstretched arm; a direct blow to the shoulder area; forceful throwing, lifting or hitting; or contact with another player. By the Numbers In 45 percent of shoulder joint instability injuries, ...

New study by Syracuse University scientists uncovers a reproduction conundrum

2012-08-02
When it comes to sperm meeting eggs in sexual reproduction, conventional wisdom holds that the fastest swimming sperm are most likely to succeed in their quest to fertilize eggs. That wisdom was turned upside down in a new study of sperm competition in fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster), which found that slower and/or longer sperm outcompete their faster rivals. The study, recently published online in Current Biology and forthcoming in print on Sept. 25, was done by a team of scientists led by corresponding author Stefan Lüpold, a post-doctoral researcher in the Department ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Engineering invites submissions on AI for engineering

In Croatia’s freshwater lakes, selfish bacteria hoard nutrients

Research suggests our closest neighboring galaxy may be being torn apart

Researchers identify factors in early-life linked to body fat in South Asian children

Environment: Less than 10% of global plastics manufactured from recycled materials

Influenza vaccination among people with Medicare by race and ethnicity, education, and rurality

Neighborhood characteristics and mental health from childhood to adolescence

Centrifugation liver support using regional mesylate anticoagulation is safe for liver failure patients with high risk of bleeding

Cancer Research Changed My Life campaign shows personal impact of scientific discoveries

AERA announces 2025 award winners in education research

New platform leverages AI and quantum computing to predict salmonella antimicrobial resistance

Transplanting Posidonia oceanica: a major scientific advance for the conservation of seagrass meadows

Patients' experience of healthcare should be a greater part of assessing quality

Tsinghua University Press and ResearchGate expand Journal Home partnership

Therapy-related b-lymphoblastic leukemia following treatment for multiple myeloma with unusual surface light chain expression: a case report

Poo-romising frontier in fecal microbiota transplantation

A new approach to differentiating large granular lymphocytic leukemias and their mimics in light of current updates in the 5th Edition of the WHO Classification

Simple and cost-effective reporter assay for evaluating chemical-induced epigenetic changes

Scientists say the “plant world” needs to come out and claim its place at the One Health table

A new tool to improve lives after brain injury is underway at The University of Texas at San Antonio

Guinea pigs: A promising animal model to study the human embryo

The rise of "gut feelings" in US political rhetoric

How mothers adapt to the metabolic demands of nursing

Caspian Sea decline threatens endangered seals, coastal communities and industry

Landmark study identifies new genetic cause of neurodevelopmental disorders, bringing long-awaited answers to families

Scientists create “metal detector” to hunt down tumors

New USC study identifies key brain networks behind post-stroke urinary incontinence

Hidden potential in multiple disabilities

How to protect bumblebee colonies safe from killer moths? Keep honeybee hives away from them

Rolling particles make suspensions more fluid

[Press-News.org] Multiple husbands serve as child support and life insurance in some cultures says MU researcher