Read more
The Human Sciences address problems in nature and society that often require coordinated approaches of several scientific disciplines and scholarly research, embracing the social and biological sciences, and history. When we wish, for example, to understand how some sub-populations and not others come to be vulnerable, why a disease spreads in one part of a population and not another, or which gene variants are transmitted across generations, then a remarkable range of disciplinary perspectives need to be brought together, from the study of institutional structures, cultural boundaries, and social networks down to the micro-biology of cellular pathways, and gene expression. The need to explain and address differential impacts of pressing contemporary issues like AIDS, ageing, social and economic inequalities, and environmental change, are well-known cases in point. Population concepts, models, and evidence lie at the core of approaches to all of these problems, if only because accurate differentiation and identification of groups, their structures, constituents, and relations between sub-populations, are necessary to specify their nature and extent. The study of population thus draws both on statistical methodologies of demography and population genetics and sustained observation of the ways in which populations and sub-populations are formed, maintained, or broken up in nature, in the laboratory, and in society. In an era in which research needs to operate on multiple levels, population thinking thus provides a common ground for communication and critical thought across disciplines.
Population in the Human Sciences addresses the need for review and assessment of the framework of interdisciplinary population studies. Limitations to prevailing postwar paradigms like the Evolutionary Synthesis and Demographic Transition were becoming evident by the 1970s. Subsequent decades have witnessed an immense expansion of population modelling and related empirical inquiry, with new genetic developments that have reshaped evolutionary, population, and developmental biology. The rise of anthropological and historical demography, and social network analysis, are playing major roles in rethinking modern and earlier population history. More recently, the emergence of sub-disciplines like biodemography and evolutionary anthropology, and growing links between evolutionary and developmental biology, indicate a growing convergence of biological and social approaches to population.
List of contents
- PART I. Population in the Human Sciences: An Introduction
- Introduction
- PART II. What is a Population?
- 1: Philip Kreager: Population and the Making of the Human Sciences: An Historical Outline
- 2: Walter Bodmer and Bruce Winney: Population Genetics: The Study of the Genetic Structure of Human Populations
- 3: Daniel John Lawson: Populations in Statistical Genetic Modelling and Inference
- 4: Kenneth W. Wachter: Population Heterogeneity in the Spotlight of Biodemography
- PART III. Rethinking Intra- and Inter-Population Dynamics
- 5: John Odling-Smee: Niche Construction in Human Evolution and Demography
- 6: Simon Szreter: Populations for Studying the Causes of Britain's Fertility Decline: Communication Communities
- 7: Hans-Peter Kohler, Stéphane Helleringer, Jere R. Behrman, and Susan C. Watkins: The Social and the Sexual: Networks in Contemporary Demographic Research
- 8: Jennifer A. Johnson-Hanks: Populations are Composed One Event at a Time
- PART IV. Mechanisms of Local Level Variation and Change of State
- 9: Elisabeth Schröder-Butterfill: Networks, Strata, and Ageing: Towards a Compositional Demography of Vulnerability
- 10: Graeme Hugo: Constructing Migration in Southeast Asia: Conceptual, Empirical, and Policy Issues
- 11: Melissa J. Brown: Collective Identities, Shifting Population Membership, and Niche Construction Theory: Implications from Taiwanese and Chinese Empirical Evidence
- 12: Hillard Kaplan, Paul L. Hooper, Jonathan Stieglitz, and Michael Gurven: The Causal Relationship between Fertility and Infant Mortality: Prospective Analyses of a Population in Transition
- PART V. Constructing Populations in the Long Term
- 13: Francesc Calafell and David Comas: Genetics and the Reconstruction of African Population History
- 14: Sarah Elton and Jason Dunn: Species, Populations, and Groups in Hominin Evolution
- 15: Mikolaj Szoltysek: Residence Patterns and the Human-Ecological Setting in Historical Eastern Europe: A Challenge of Compositional (Re)analysis
- 16: Mark Elvin: Linking Late-Imperial and Early Modern Population Dynamics in the Lower Yangzi Valley: An Analysis of Xiaoji Township
- PART VI. Identifying Sub-Populations for Disease Treatment and Control
- 17: Chris Spencer: From Populations to Clines in Modern Statistical Genetics
- 18: Simon Gregson and Tim Hallett: Population Structure and Public Health Research on HIV Control in Sub-Saharan Africa
- 19: Stephen Kunitz: Interventions in Context
- 20: Klim McPherson: Hormones and Disease: Contested Knowledge of Exogenous Hormones in the Evaluation of Oral Contraceptives and Hormone Replacement Therapy
About the author
Philip Kreager is an anthropological demographer and historian of population thought and analysis. He is Senior Research Fellow in Human Sciences, Somerville College; Director, Fertility and Reproductive Studies Group, School of Anthropology; Lecturer and Tutor in Population, Institute of Human Sciences; and Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Population Ageing, Oxford University. He currently co-directs an exploratory anthropological and demographic study of problems of malaria treatment in the eastern archipelago of Indonesia. During 1999-2007 he directed Ageing in Indonesia, a multi-site longitudinal study of ageing in three Indonesian Communities, supported by the Welcome Trust. This work has led to continuing collaboration with the University of Indonesia, where he is Honorary Professor. Dr Kreager has a primary interest in the history of population thought, particularly as a common ground of theory and analysis linking the biological and social sciences.
Summary
Addresses the need for review and assessment of the framework of interdisciplinary population studies. It includes chapters on anthropology, archaeology, demography, ecology, epidemiology, geography, genomics, human biology, population genetics, social and demographic history, the history of science, and social network analysis.
Additional text
Ultimately, philosophically inclined readers and historians of science may get the most out of this book, as it offers a panoramic view of the of human sciences.