Bountiful Island
A Study of Land Tenure on a Micronesian Atoll
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Published:30th Nov '94
Should be back in stock very soon
In Bountiful Island a major Arctic scholar turns his eye on Micronesia: the small and isolated atoll of Pingelap in Micronesia lies in a moist climatic belt which encourages abundant plant life, including such food plants as coconuts, breadfruit and taro. In this detailed examination of land-tenure practices in the atoll, David Damas argues that the resulting high level of subsistence has brought an expansion of the population which has put great pressures on land. Under these pressures, land tenure has moved from communal usage to lineage control, to individual ownership and transmission rights. Comparative material from neighbouring Mwaekil atoll indicates the same general succession from larger to smaller units of tenure with increasing population. While control of land by kin groups is usual in the Pacific, other atoll societies show examples of individual tenure which also relate to changes in population densities. Bountiful Island will be of interest to all anthropologists studying cross-cultural comparisons in the theory of land-tenure practices and the ethnology, social anthropology and ethnohistory of Micronesia. This book is also suitable for senior undergraduate and graduate courses in cultural ecology and area courses on the Pacific.
``Bountiful Island is a major contribution not only to the Oceanic literature but also to the literature on ethnographic method. In particular, his combination of quantitative comparison and case studies is a model for the ethnography of systemic variability within a population.'' -- ISLA: A Journal of Micronesian Studies
ISBN: 9780889202399
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 515g
288 pages