Stephanie Kulow
Arizona State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stephanie Kulow.
Ecology and Society | 2011
Margaret C. Nelson; Michelle Hegmon; Stephanie Kulow; Matthew A. Peeples; Keith W. Kintigh; Ann P. Kinzig
The value of “diversity” in social and ecological systems is frequently asserted in academic and policy literature. Diversity is thought to enhance the resilience of social-ecological systems to varied and potentially uncertain future conditions. Yet there are trade-offs; diversity in ecological and social domains has costs as well as benefits. In this paper, we examine social diversity, specifically its costs and benefits in terms of decision making in middle range or tribal societies, using archaeological evidence spanning seven centuries from four regions of the U.S. Southwest. In these nonstate societies, social diversity may detract from the capacity for collective action. We ask whether as population density increases, making collective action increasingly difficult, social diversity declines. Further, we trace the cases of low diversity and high population density across our long-temporal sequences to see how they associate with the most dramatic transformations. This latter analysis is inspired by the claim in resilience literature that reduction of diversity may contribute to reduction in resilience to varied conditions. Using archaeological data, we examine social diversity and conformity through the material culture (pottery styles) of past societies. Our research contributes to an enhanced understanding of how population density may limit social diversity and suggests the role that this association may play in some contexts of dramatic social transformation.
American Antiquity | 2006
Margaret C. Nelson; Michelle Hegmon; Stephanie Kulow; Karen Schollmeyer
Collapse and abandonment dominate the popular literature on prehistoric societies, yet we know that reorganization is a more common process by which social and ecological relationships change. We explore the process of reorganization using the emerging perspective of resilience theory. Ecologists and social scientists working within a resilience perspective have argued that reorganization is an important component of long-term adaptive cycles, but it remains understudied in both social science and ecology. One of the central assumptions to emerge from the resilience perspective is that declines in the diversity of social and ecological units contribute to transformations in social and ecological systems. We evaluate this assumption using archaeological data, which offer an opportunity to investigate a time span rarely examined in studies of resilience and reorganization. We focus on the 11th to 13th century in the eastern Mimbres area of southwestern New Mexico, a period within which a substantial reorganization occurred. Much is known about the regional-scale changes that resulted in the depopulation of nearly every large village in the Mimbres region, what some have referred to as the “Mimbres collapse.” Our analyses examine both continuity and change in aspects of house- and village-level reorganization.
American Anthropologist | 2008
Michelle Hegmon; Matthew A. Peeples; Ann P. Kinzig; Stephanie Kulow; Cathryn Meegan; Margaret C. Nelson
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2005
Michelle Hegmon; Stephanie Kulow
Archive | 2012
Margaret C. Nelson; Michelle Hegmon; Keith W. Kintigh; Ann P. Kinzig; Ben A. Nelson; John M. Anderies; David Abbott; Katherine A. Spielmann; Scott E. Ingram; Matthew A. Peeples; Stephanie Kulow; Colleen Strawhacker; Cathryn Meegan
Cadernos do LEPAARQ (UFPEL) | 2017
Michelle Hegmon; Stephanie Kulow
The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2015
Andrea Torvinen; Ben A. Nelson; Stephanie Kulow
Archive | 2011
Margaret C. Nelson; Michelle Hegmon; Stephanie Kulow; Matthew A. Peeples; Keith W. Kintigh; Ann P. Kinzig
Archive | 2003
Michelle Hegmon; Margaret C. Nelson; Karen Schollmeyer; Stephanie Kulow
Archive | 2002
Michelle Hegmon; Margaret C. Nelson; Stephanie Kulow; Karen Schollmeyer