• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Recent Research Overstated How Much Women Hunt In Foraging Societies, Study Argues

May 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Recent years have seen some studies challenge the assumed gender roles of hunter-gatherer societies, arguing that women are often integral to hunting and aren’t solely berry-picking gatherers. However, a new study was weighed into the debate and suggested that some of this research may have overblown their claims. 

Advertisement

Last year, an influential study looked at data on 63 modern-day foraging societies from around the world, including Indigenous peoples from North and South America, Africa, Australia, Asia, and Oceania.

Advertisement

They concluded that women actively hunt in 79 percent of these societies. Furthermore, in societies where hunting was considered the most important subsistence approach, women actively participated 100 percent of the time.

In the latest study, a group of researchers strike back against the 2023 study, arguing their conclusions were based on methodological flaws and selection bias.

They attempted to replicate the 2023 study, but came to a totally different conclusion: women hunters were very much the exception rather than the rule.

The researchers contend that the previous study drew upon an ethnographic database where “explicit” information about hunting was available, which created a selection bias and a misleading conclusion. They also identified “numerous coding errors”, which they say undermined the paper’s conclusions

Advertisement

“As a diverse group of hunter-gatherer experts, we find that claims that foraging societies lack or have weak gendered divisions of labor are contradicted by empirical evidence,” the study authors write. 

“Gendered divisions of labor are a feature of every known contemporary hunter-gatherer (forager) society. While gender roles are certainly flexible, and prominent and well-studied cases of female hunting do exist, it is more often men who hunt,” they added. 

Nevertheless, the researchers maintain that it is important to dispel the outdated notion that women in hunter-gatherer societies never hunt, arguing that men’s dominance in hunting has likely been overstated in the past.

Over the past few years, several studies have suggested that women hunted in many prehistoric hunter-gatherer cultures. Most prominently, a 2020 study into a 9,000-year-old burial site in the Andean highlands of Peru suggested that a “nontrivial” number of females were proud hunters of big-game. Women were frequently buried with a big-game hunting toolkit that included stone projectile points, such as sharpened weapons and tide-scraping tools, indicating that big-game hunting was an integral part of their lives.

Advertisement

Whether this was the norm, however, is up for debate.

This latest study believes that it is vital to constantly reassess the world to see how bygone ideas may have shaped our previous conclusions. Likewise, though, we should be wary that today’s mindsets will likely cloud our perceptions too.

“We caution against ethnographic revisionism that projects Westernized conceptions of labor and its value onto foraging societies,” the study authors write. 

The new study is published in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Futures up, Wall Street tries to recover after sharp selloff
  2. French minister Beaune: French fishermen must not pay for UK’s Brexit failure
  3. Without The Ozone Layer, This Is What Our Planet Would Be Like
  4. Brand New Species Of Delightful Sea Creature Discovered Off The British Coast

Source Link: Recent Research Overstated How Much Women Hunt In Foraging Societies, Study Argues

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • US Just Killed NASA’s Mars Sample Return Mission – So What Happens Now?
  • Art Sleuths May Have Recovered Traces Of Da Vinci’s DNA From One Of His Drawings
  • Countries With The Most Narcissists Identified By 45,000-Person Study, And The Results Might Surprise You
  • World’s Oldest Poison Arrows Were Used By Hunters 60,000 Years Ago
  • The Real Reason You Shouldn’t Eat (Most) Raw Cookie Dough
  • Antarctic Scientists Have Just Moved The South Pole – Literally
  • “What We Have Is A Very Good Candidate”: Has The Ancestor Of Homo Sapiens Finally Been Found In Africa?
  • Europe’s Missing Ceratopsian Dinosaurs Have Been Found And They’re Quite Diverse
  • Why Don’t Snorers Wake Themselves Up?
  • Endangered “Northern Native Cat” Captured On Camera For The First Time In 80 Years At Australian Sanctuary
  • Watch 25 Years Of A Supernova Expanding Into Space Squeezed Into This 40-Second NASA Video
  • “Diet Stacking” Trend Could Be Seriously Bad For Your Health
  • Meet The Psychedelic Earth Tiger, A Funky Addition To “10 Species To Watch” In 2026
  • The Weird Mystery Of The “Einstein Desert” In The Hunt For Rogue Planets
  • NASA Astronaut Charles Duke Left A Touching Photograph And Message On The Moon In 1972
  • How Multilingual Are You? This New Language Calculator Lets You Find Out In A Minute
  • Europa’s Seabed Might Be Too Quiet For Life: “The Energy Just Doesn’t Seem To Be There”
  • Amoebae: The Microscopic Health Threat Lurking In Our Water Supplies. Are We Taking Them Seriously?
  • The Last Dogs In Antarctica Were Kicked Out In April 1994 By An International Treaty
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Snapped By NASA’s Europa Mission: “We’re Still Scratching Our Heads About Some Of The Things We’re Seeing”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2026 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version