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Saturday 10 March 2018

Why Wage Earners Hunt: Food Sharing, Social Structure, and Influence in an Arctic Mixed Economy

https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/696018 Elspeth Ready and Eleanor A. Power Elspeth Ready is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Department of Sociology at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln (310 Benton Hall, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588, USA [eready@unl.edu]). Eleanor A. Power is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Methodology at the London School of Economics and Political Science (Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, United Kingdom [e.a.power@lse.ac.uk]). SUBMITTED: Sept 01, 2016ACCEPTED: Jan 03, 2017ONLINE: Dec 28, 2017 Abstract Full Text PDF Abstract Food sharing has been a central focus of research in human behavioral ecology and anthropology more broadly. Studies of food sharing have typically focused on either the individual’s motivations to share or the social formations and value systems that sharing produces. Here, we employ social network analysis to do both, investigating how strategic economic decisions, such as decisions about sharing, are embedded in and feed back onto social structure. This research is based on a questionnaire conducted with 110 Inuit households during 12 months of ethnographic fieldwork in Kangiqsujuaq, Nunavik, Canada. In Kangiqsujuaq, traditional Inuit resource harvesting and sharing practices coexist with and depend on opportunities and constraints in the cash economy. Food sharing in Kangiqsujuaq emerges as a complex social, political, and economic phenomenon that accomplishes different objectives for actors based on their social position. The network approach adopted in this research highlights the conjugate role of individual decisions and structural constraints in broader processes of social and cultural change. In the mixed economy of Kangiqsujuaq, food sharing, social structure, and political influence are intimately connected. The results suggest that economic and political inequality in the settlement are reinforced by the social structures produced through sharing.