The importance of care of infants and children in palaeoanthropological and human behavioural ecological research on the evolution of our species is evident in the diversity of research on human development, alloparental care, and learning and social interaction. There has been a recent surge of interest in modelling the social implications of care provision for people with serious disabilities in bioarchaeology. However, there is a lack of acknowledgement of infant and child care in bioarchaeology, despite the significant labour and resources that are required, and the implications this has for health outcomes within societies. Drawing on the recent proliferation of studies on infancy and childhood in evolutionary anthropology and bioarcha...
This book provides the first comprehensive introduction to, and explanation of, the theory and pract...
Palaeoanthropology, or more precisely Palaeolithic archaeology, offers the possibility of bridging t...
With their spectre of intergenerational betrayal, global environmental crises increasingly entangle ...
This article aims to provide an overview of some of the more important developments in the bioarchae...
Children have become firmly embedded within multi-disciplinary investigations of young lives, yet wi...
What happens to the mundane practice of carrying infants if we situate it in the context of climate ...
This collection of case studies represents a companion volume to Lorna Tilley’s Theory and Practice ...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
YesBreastfeeding is known to be a powerful mediator of maternal and childhood health, with impacts ...
Emerging understanding of the extent to which the childhood environment can influence long-term neur...
In archaeology, human skeletal remains are often dealt with separately from their social context. Ho...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
Humans are the only species to have evolved cooperative care-giving as a strategy for disease contro...
The paper has four goals: to refute the claim that anthropologists have not studied childhood; to pr...
Non-maternal carers (allomothers) are hypothesized to lighten the mother's workload, allowing for th...
This book provides the first comprehensive introduction to, and explanation of, the theory and pract...
Palaeoanthropology, or more precisely Palaeolithic archaeology, offers the possibility of bridging t...
With their spectre of intergenerational betrayal, global environmental crises increasingly entangle ...
This article aims to provide an overview of some of the more important developments in the bioarchae...
Children have become firmly embedded within multi-disciplinary investigations of young lives, yet wi...
What happens to the mundane practice of carrying infants if we situate it in the context of climate ...
This collection of case studies represents a companion volume to Lorna Tilley’s Theory and Practice ...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
YesBreastfeeding is known to be a powerful mediator of maternal and childhood health, with impacts ...
Emerging understanding of the extent to which the childhood environment can influence long-term neur...
In archaeology, human skeletal remains are often dealt with separately from their social context. Ho...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
Humans are the only species to have evolved cooperative care-giving as a strategy for disease contro...
The paper has four goals: to refute the claim that anthropologists have not studied childhood; to pr...
Non-maternal carers (allomothers) are hypothesized to lighten the mother's workload, allowing for th...
This book provides the first comprehensive introduction to, and explanation of, the theory and pract...
Palaeoanthropology, or more precisely Palaeolithic archaeology, offers the possibility of bridging t...
With their spectre of intergenerational betrayal, global environmental crises increasingly entangle ...