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Channels - SUBSTITUTABILITY OF KIN AND THE CROW-OMAHA PROBLEM :: FRELIP Discovery
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From Consanguinity to Consubstantiality: Julian Pitt-Rivers’ ‘The Kith and the Kin’
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Ethnological Problems and the Production of Archaeological Kinship Research
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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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Book Review: Network Analysis and Ethnographic Problems: Process Models of a Turkish Nomad Clan, by Douglas R. White and Ulla C. Johansen (Oxford, UK and Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2004, Cloth / 2006, Paper, 544 pages)
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Unified gross substitutes and inverse isotonicity for equilibrium problems
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A Cultural History of Climate Change
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Pinngortitaq – A Place of Becoming
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ExtrACTION: Impacts, Engagements, and Alternative Futures
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Going to School in the Forest: Changing Evaluations of Animal-Plant Interactions in the Kichwa Amazon
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Off-the-Grid in an On-Grid Nation: Household Energy Choices, Intra-Community Effects, and Attitudes in a Rural Neighborhood in Utah
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Toxic Tropics: Purity and Danger in Everywhere in Everyday Life
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CHAPTER 8: DWIGHT READ: TOWARDS A NEW PARADIGM: FOLLOWED BY A DISCUSSION BETWEEN THE AUTHOR AND DWIGHT READ
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KINSHIP AND HISTORY: TRIBES, GENEALOGIES, AND SOCIAL CHANGE AMONG THE BEDOUIN OF THE EASTERN ARAB WORLD
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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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Critique of Guillermo Algaze’s “The Sumerian Takeoff”
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Preface to Structure and Dynamics:1#3
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About the Image: Diffusion Dynamics in an Historical Network
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Network Perspectives on Communities
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Atlas of Chiefdoms and Early States
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Response to Christiansen and Altaweel
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Fighting a Hydra: A Note on the Network Embeddedness of the War on Terror
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Structure and Dynamics Vol.1 No.2: Editorial Commentary
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Response to Oscillations in Population Sizes – From Ecology to History
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Press Release: New calculations show as many as 7.3 million Americans know someone killed or injured in Iraq and Afghanistan