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Studies in Economic Anthropology
George Dalton
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Title Page
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Copyright Page
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Editor’s Note
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Table of Contents
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Introduction: The Subject of Economic Anthropology
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PART I. CONCEPTUAL ISSUES
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1. Carl Menger’s Two Meanings of “Economic”
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2. Monetization, Commercialization, Market Orientation, and Market Dependence’
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PART Il. TRADITIONAL ECONOMIES
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3. The Intensity of Domestic Production in Primitive Societies: Social Inflections of the Chayanov Slope
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4. ‘Salt Currency” and the Circulation of Commodities Among the Baruya of New Guinea
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5. Commerce in the Dark Ages: A Critique of the Evidence
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6. Beggar Moneylenders of Central India
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PART IlI. ACCULTURATION, MARKETS, AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
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7. Reciprocity of Favors in the Urban Middle Class of Chile
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8. Traditional Economic Institutions and the Acculturation of Canadian Eskimos
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9. Estimating Market Conditions and Profit Expectations of Fish Sellers at Cape Coast, Ghana
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10. Security and Risk-Taking Among Poor Peasants: A Brazilian Case
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11. Developing Village India: A Statistical Analysis
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BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Citable Link
Published: 1971
Publisher: American Anthropological Association