Political and demographic-ecological determinants of institutionalised human sacrifice
Anthropological Forum: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Comparative Sociology • Vol/Iss. 24 • Published In • Pages: 47-70 •
By Winkelman, Michael James
Hypothesis
The prevalence of "legitimate" or institutionalized human sacrifice in a given society is associated with certain geopolitical conditions and demographic-ecological conditions (48).
Note
The first four independent variables (alliances, population stress, kin selection executive, and internal war for resources) were each independent significant predictors. Class stratification, patrilineal inheritance, patrilocal marital residence, higher political organization, and levels of autonomy were all considered but found not to be significant.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Multiple Linear Regression; Binary Logistic Analyses | Supported | p < 0.05 | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Alliances/confederacies | Independent | External Relations |
Class Stratification | Independent | Classes |
Higher Political Organization | Independent | Territorial Hierarchy |
Institutionalized Cannibalism | Dependent | Cannibalism |
Institutionalized Human Sacrifice | Dependent | Instigation Of War, Prayers And Sacrifices |
Internal Warfare | Independent | Ingroup Antagonisms, Warfare |
Kin Select Executive | Independent | Community Heads |
Patrilineal Inheritance | Independent | Inheritance |
Patrilocal Marital Residence | Independent | Residence |
Population Stress | Independent | Diet, Disasters |
Semi-, De Facto Or Full Autonomy | Independent | Dependencies |