Abstract
Sex differences in behavior are most interesting when they are the result of inherent differences in the operational rules motivating behavior and not merely a reflection of differing life history experiences. American men and women exhibit a few differences in testamentary patterns of property allocation that appear to be due to inherently different rules of allocation. Even when analyses control for resources and surviving kin configurations, women distribute their property among a greater number of individual beneficiaries than do men. The most striking differences in property allocation between men and women occur within the nuclear family and reflect differences in reproductive life span and the resulting reproductive conflicts between spouses that can endure beyond death.
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The initial research for this paper was funded by a grant to Sarah Blaffer Hrdy and the author from the Rockefeller Foundation Program in Changing Gender Roles.
Debra Judge is associated with the Ecology Graduate Group and the Department of Anthropology at the University of California at Davis. Her interests focus on human demography, reproductive strategies, and the ecological conditions influencing human mating and parenting strategies—especially intergenerational resource transfer.
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Judge, D.S. American legacies and the variable life histories of women and men. Human Nature 6, 291–323 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02734204
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02734204