Substitute Parents: Biological and Social Perspective on Alloparenting Across Human Societies (Studies of the Biosocial Society) (Studies of the Biosocial Society)
Gillian Bentley
From a comparative perspective, human life histories are unique and raising offspring is unusually costly: humans have relatively short birth intervals compared to other apes, childhood is long, mothers care simultaneously for many dependent children (other apes raise one offspring at a time), infant mortality is high in natural fertility/mortality populations, and human females have a long post-reproductive lifespan. These features conspire to make child raising very burdensome. Mothers frequently defray these costs with paternal help (not usual in other ape species), although this contribution is not always enough. Grandmothers, elder siblings, paid allocarers, or society as a whole, ... Read more
Show LessProduct Details
About Gillian Bentley
Reviews for Substitute Parents: Biological and Social Perspective on Alloparenting Across Human Societies (Studies of the Biosocial Society) (Studies of the Biosocial Society)