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Channels - A Cultural History of Climate Change :: FRELIP Discovery
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Discovering Local Discourses about Climate Change
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KINSHIP AND HISTORY: TRIBES, GENEALOGIES, AND SOCIAL CHANGE AMONG THE BEDOUIN OF THE EASTERN ARAB WORLD
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Do myths ever die? Social-cultural changes and mythical transformations in Indigenous Amazonia: a dialogue with Peter Gow
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Genetic Dendrograms and Malaysian Population History
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Cultural dynamics: formal descriptions of cultural processes
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Response to Oscillations in Population Sizes – From Ecology to History
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Joseph Conrad’s “An Outpost of Progress”: History and the Epistemics of Fiction
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Sleep and risk-taking propensity in life history and evolutionary perspectives
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History’s Shadow, Baldwin’s Mirror, and the Long Undoing of American Innocence
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Evolution of Cultural Groups and Persistent Parochialism
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Culture, Altruism, and Conflict Between Ancestors and Descendants
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Persistent Cultures: Miskitu Kinship Terminological Fluidity
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Weight Matrices for Cultural Proximity: Deriving Weights from a Language Phylogeny
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Review: Mountains of Blame: Climate and Culpability in the Philippine Uplands.
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“A Vessel Larger Than Reality to Hold”: Water Crisis and Indian Speculative Climate Fiction
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Grim Ambiguity Coupled with Sanguinity: Submergence of Anthropocentrism in Dystopian Climate Fiction
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How to Deal with Missing Data and Galton’s Problem in Cross-Cultural Survey Research: A Primer for R
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Continuity and Change of Community-Initiated Militias in Mozambique
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The Refugee Carceral Condition under Racial Capitalism: Histories of Intracommunity Policing across French Indochina, Cold War Southeast Asia, and US Resettlement Contexts
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Public Culture and Sustainable Practices: Peninsula Europe from an ecodiversity perspective, posing questions to Complexity Scientists
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Chamada para dossiê: “Periferia é Periferia em qualquer lugar”: produção cultural em periferias urbanas
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Practices of Resilience: Nahuatl and Nahua Online Cultural Initiatives in Mexico City and Los Angeles During COVID-19
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WHY CAN HUNTER-GATHERER GROUPS BE ORGANIZED SIMLARLY FOR RESOURCE PROCUREMENT, BUT THEIR KINSHIP TERMINOLOGIES ARE STRIKINGLY DISSIMILAR: A CHALLENGE FOR FUTURE CROSS-CULTURAL RESEARCH
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Going to School in the Forest: Changing Evaluations of Animal-Plant Interactions in the Kichwa Amazon