The importance of raiding ecology and sex differences in offensive and defensive warfare

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42 (2019)
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Abstract

De Dreu and Gross offer a compelling synthesis of a growing literature on the psychology of attack and defense. I argue that human raiding ecology suggests the need to endogenize attacker-defender move order as well as opportunities for tactical mismatch available to defenders. Perhaps most significantly, I draw attention to the surprising lacunae in sex differences across attack and defense.

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Anthony C. Lopez
Washington State University

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