Document Type

Article

Publication Date

Spring 2015

DOI

https://doi.org/10.3167/sib.2015.140104

Abstract

This article examines altruistic social norms among the Dolgans and the Nganasans in Arctic Siberia, drawing on and integrating experimental game theory and semiotic approaches. The article demonstrates the complementarity of these two methodologies in order to more fully understand how sharing is promoted over individual self-aggrandizement in a communal-resource property regime. Any theory of social norms should be of some practical benefit for solving current environmental dilemmas, as well as for increasing understanding of the factors lending sustainability to human-environment relationships. With that goal in mind, the article presents results of experimental games conducted in the Taimyr Autonomous Region in 2003, along with an analysis of indigenous communication (sayings, aphorisms, taboos, etc.) aimed at the promotion of altruistic social norms. A synthesis of the two approaches is outlined with implications for the broader literature on hunting peoples across the north and beyond.

Copyright Statement

This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedited version of an article published in Sibirica. The definitive publisher-authenticated version (2015) Sibirica, 14(1), 68-101 is available online at doi: 10.3167/sib.2015.140104.

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