Cultural evolution and US agricultural institutions: a historical case study of Maine's blueberry industry

Sustainability Science
Samuel P Hanes, Timothy Michael Waring

Abstract

This paper presents a study of the emergence of environmental management institutions in Maine's blueberry industry. We follow a cultural evolutionary approach to understand the factors that influenced the emergence of these institutions in environmental collective action problems. Specifically, we use a cultural multilevel selection framework to explore the prediction that collective action and institutions of environmental management emerge when cultural selection is the strongest among social groups positioned to solve a given collective action problem. To do this, we construct an evidence typology suited for a historical evolutionary analysis. We find that the scale of cultural adaptation responded to scale of the most pressing adaptive problem. The case study provides support for the group-level selection theory of institutional evolution, and displays patterns of institutional adaptation that respond to changing conditions over time. We argue that the dominant level of selection concept in multilevel selection theory helps to clarify how matches and mismatches between resource scale and institutional scale arise. We conclude that cultural evolutionary theory provides a general causal framework for organizing evidence, and...Continue Reading

References

Mar 1, 1982·Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology·R J BushwayJ Wertam
Nov 11, 2006·The Behavioral and Brain Sciences·Alex MesoudiKevin N Laland
Oct 7, 2009·Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences·Robert Boyd, Peter J Richerson
Jul 30, 2010·Proceedings. Biological Sciences·Joseph Henrich, Natalie Henrich
Oct 2, 2012·PloS One·Charles Perreault

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