Networks & Kinship
Across
- 1. Weak ties are powerful because they serve as ________ for information, connecting separate social cliques.
- 4. The form of marriage exchange practiced by the Ju/'Hoansi, where the groom pays the bride's family with labor instead of wealth.
- 6. The theoretical rule compelling one to marry outside their own kinship or community group, often to form political alliances.
- 7. The delayed, reciprocal gift exchange system used by the Ju/'Hoansi to establish long-term, risk-sharing alliances with distant camps.
- 8. The residence rule where a couple moves to live near the wife's mother's family, often found in societies where women's labor is central to subsistence.
- 10. The universal kinship and social structure found in foraging societies like the Ju/'Hoansi, characterized by equality and resource-sharing.
Down
- 2. What the information you receive from your closest strong ties tends to be, since they share your social network.
- 3. The term for the resource flow in marriage where the bride's family transfers money or goods to the groom or the couple's new household.
- 5. The post-marital residence rule most common in modern industrial societies, requiring the couple to establish a new, independent home.
- 9. The anthropologist who argued marriage is a flexible "bundle of rights" rather than a universal definition.