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How maya women respond to changing technology

The effect of helping behavior on initiating reproduction

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Abstract

In the mid 1970s labor-saving technology was introduced into a Maya subsistence agricultural community that markedly increased the efficiency with which maize could be ground and water collected. This increased efficiency introduces a possible savings in the time that women allocate to work, which can be reapportioned to child care, food production, domestic work, or leisure. An earlier study suggested that this labor-saving technology had a positive effect in decreasing the age at which these Maya women begin their reproductive careers. Although there is a statistical association between the age at which women bear their first child and the introduction of modern technology, this association does not demonstrate that the decline in age at first birth is causally related to the presence of technology. This paper pursues two objectives to evaluate this potential causal relationship in greater detail. First, a theory relating technological change to the initiation of a reproductive career is briefly developed in order to make qualitative predictions about behavioral changes as a response to changing technology. Second, these predictions are then tested against time allocation data recently collected in this same Maya community.

We suggest that both of the conditions necessary to initiate reproduction—fecundity and access to mates—fundamentally depend on the amount of help that a girl provides to her family. Further, the help that a girl provides can be affected by technological changes. Analyses show that when modern technology is available, unmarried young women do not change the time allocated to domestic tasks and child care, and allocate more time to low-energy leisure activities. This lack of perceived benefit to working more and a potential concomitant shift towards a positive energy balance may in part explain why Maya women leave home and initiate reproduction at a younger age after labor-saving technology is introduced.

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Correspondence to Karen L. Kramer.

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This research was supported by grants from the Tinker-Mellon Foundation, the University of New Mexico, MicroTechnology, and a National Science Foundation Grant awarded to Christopher Dore and James Boone.

Karen Kramer received her Ph.D. in Anthropology at the University of New Mexico this year. Her interests include life history theory, cost-of-children research, and children’s work among subsistence agriculturalists and hunter-gatherers.

Garnett McMillan is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico. His studies pursue sociality theory, life history theory, and hunter-gatherer research.

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Kramer, K.L., McMillan, G.P. How maya women respond to changing technology. Hum Nat 9, 205–223 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12110-998-1003-4

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