The Sexual Division of Labor

The Individual and Society
Human Sexuality
Rebecca Bliege Bird

Rebecca Bliege Bird

Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA

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Brian F. Codding

Brian F. Codding

University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

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First published: 15 May 2015
Citations: 16

Abstract

Many evolutionary arguments fossilize a human division of labor as one of man the hunter, and woman the gatherer, with differences in labor arising out of the effectiveness of efficiency. We suggest here that arguments based solely on the efficiency of labor specialization among heterosexual married pairs over-generalize divisions of labor that are, in reality, much more diverse. Divisions of labor can be based on age, as well as on gender, and are not limited solely to monogamous marital pairs. Divisions of gender take the form more generally not of meat and vegetables, but of the acquisition of high and low variance foods. Some differences in labor may be the result of conflicting interests, others emerging from common goals, and still others from the power of patriarchy. Differences in labor patterns may not be designed solely, or even primarily, to provision children, but may also be shaped by the social goals of both sexes.

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