Recent field studies of a variety of mammalian species reveal a surprisingly high frequency of infanticide - the killing of unweaned or otherwise maternally dependent offspring. Similarly, studies of birds, fish, amphibians, and invertebrates demonstrate egg and larval mortality in these species, a phenomenon directly analogous to infanticide in mammals. In this collection, Hausfater and Hrdy draw together work on animal and human infanticide and place these studies in a broad evolutionary and comparative perspective.Infanticide presents the theoretical background and taxonomic distribution of infanticide, infanticide in nonhuman primates, infanticide in rodents, and infanticide in humans. It examines closely sex allocation and sex ratio theory, surveys the phylogeny of mammalian interbirth intervals, and reviews data on sources of egg and larval mortality in a variety of invertebrate and lower vertebrate species. Dealing with infanticide in nonhuman primates, two chapters critically examine data on infanticide in langurs and its broader theoretical implications. By reviewing sources of infant mortality in populations of small mammals and new laboratory analyses of the causes and consequences of infanticide, this work explores such issues as the ontogeny of infanticide, proximate cues of infants and females which elicit infanticidal behavior in males, the genetical basis of infanticide, and the hormonal determinants.Hausfater and Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, through their selection of materials for this book, evaluate the frequency, causes, and function of infanticide. Historical, ethnographic, and recent data on infanticide are surveyed. "Infanticide" summarizes current research on the evolutionary origins and proximate causation of infanticide in animals and man. As such it will be indispensable reading for anthropologists and behavioral biologists as well as ecologists, psychologists, demographers, and epidemiologists.
Infanticide: Its Law, Prevalence, Prevention, and History
Another notable portrayal of infanticide in China was published by the Australian journalist George Ernest Morrison (1862–1920). In 1894 Morrison traveled 1,500 miles up the Yangzi River and then another 1,500 miles overland through ...
Death in the Nursery: The Secret Crime of Infanticide
A. BACKGROUND The above quotation , from Jerome Leavitt's book on The Battered Child , graphically points out the dangers children face from punishment inflicted by their parents . Modern society has frequently overlooked this problem ...
McDonagh, Josephine, Child Murder and British Culture, 1720– 1900 (Hound-smills, New York: Palgrave, 2003). Meumann, Markus, Findelkinder, Waisenhäuser, Kindsmord: Unversorgte Kinder in der frühneuzeitlichen Gesellschaft (Munich: R.
It's very rare for a person to kill a child without some evidence in the past of child abuse,” Dr. Robert Sullivan, Schenectady County's Chief Medical Examiner, told journalists (Wallace, 1986). When Tami Tinning died in 1985, ...
The book has two main concerns. The first is to isolate the fundamental issues that must be resolved if one is to be able to formulate a defensible position on...
This book examines the social, economic and cultural conditions and stressors under which mothers commit infanticide, and shows how these conditions affect the ability to meet societal and self-perceived expectations of 'good'mothering.
We joined together to author Advocating for Women with Postpartum Mental Illness: A Guide to Changing the Law and the National Climate (Feingold and Lewis 2020), a how-to-guide for advocates and a source of useful information for legal ...
Examines female infanticide in colonial and postcolonial India.