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X-WR-CALNAME:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Syste
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X-WR-TIMEZONE:Eastern Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045824048
DTSTART:20211005T154500Z
DTEND:20211005T164500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045825073
DTSTART:20211012T154500Z
DTEND:20211012T164500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045827122
DTSTART:20211019T154500Z
DTEND:20211019T164500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045828147
DTSTART:20211026T154500Z
DTEND:20211026T164500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045830196
DTSTART:20211102T154500Z
DTEND:20211102T164500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045831221
DTSTART:20211109T164500Z
DTEND:20211109T174500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045833270
DTSTART:20211116T164500Z
DTEND:20211116T174500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045834295
DTSTART:20211123T164500Z
DTEND:20211123T174500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045835320
DTSTART:20211130T164500Z
DTEND:20211130T174500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T164454Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_37944045837369
DTSTART:20211207T164500Z
DTEND:20211207T174500Z
DESCRIPTION:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series\n\nEvolution and Social Sys
 tems\n\nThe Center for the Dynamics of Social Complexity and Exeter is hap
 py to announce a series of free webinars for Fall 2021 on Evolution and So
 cial Systems. This series is a continuation of the past semester seminars:
  DySoC/NIMBioS Webinar Series on Cultural Evolution and DySoC/NIMBioS Webi
 nar Series on Human Origins and Cultural Evolution.\n\nOrganizers: Thomas 
 Currie (University of Exeter\, Penryn Campus\, Cornwall ) and Sergey Gavri
 lets (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics\, DySoC Director\, Un
 iversity of Tennessee)\n\nCo-organizer: Peter J. Richerson (University of 
 California\, Davis)\n\nHuman social systems are extraordinarily complex an
 d diverse. Around the world are organized into different societies that ar
 e structured and by a variety of different institutions\, social norms\, b
 eliefs\, languages\, and other aspect of culture. Understanding how societ
 ies function and why societies are the way they are\, are topics of intere
 st to a wide variety of different academic disciplines. Evolutionary think
 ing can help bring together the insights from different disciplines and ap
 proaches\, and can play an important role in understanding the similaritie
 s and differences between human societies and those of other species\, the
  ways that different environmental contexts present different challenges t
 hat societies have adapted to\, how and why culture and societies change o
 ver time\, and how different cultural histories have shaped the world we l
 ive in today. In this interdisciplinary seminar series we present talks fr
 om a variety of researchers\, including anthropologists\, archaeologists\,
  behavioural ecologists\, economists\, psychologists\, and sustainability 
 scientists. As many of the talks will illustrate\, this work is not only o
 f academic interest but is increasingly important in addressing some of th
 e biggest social and ecological challenges we face in the world today.\n\n
 \nThe seminar series is funded by grants from the John Templeton Foundatio
 n and the European Research Council.\n\nOct 5\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Nathan Nunn
  (Harvard University)\nCultural MismatchOct 12\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Kristen Ha
 wkes (University of Utah)\nSexual selection\, carnivory\, and life history
  evolution in the human radiationOct 19\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Giulia Andrighett
 o (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) at CNR\, Malard
 alen University\, Vasteras\, Sweden )\nNorm change and cooperation under c
 ollective risk in a long-term experimentOct 26\, 11:45 a.m. EDT Anne Pisor
  (Washington State University)\nLong-distance social connections\, collect
 ive-action problems\, and climate-change adaptationNov 2\, 11:45 a.m. EDT 
 Timothy Njagi (Egerton University\, Kenya)\nA comparative perspective on t
 he evolution and sustainability of pastoralist production systemsNov 9\, 1
 1:45 a.m. EST Monique Borgerhoff Mulder (MPI-EVA Leipzig\, UC Davis\, Sant
 a Fe Institute)\nHow Many Wives? Tracing the Interdisciplinary Career of t
 he Polygyny Threshold ModelNov 16\, 11:45 a.m. EST Stefani Crabtree (Utah 
 State University & Santa Fe Institute)\nModern Lessons of applying Socio-E
 nvironmental Modeling to the Archaeological RecordNov 23\, 11:45 a.m. EST 
 Matthijs van Veelen (University of Amsterdam\, Netherlands)\nThe evolution
  of morality and the role of commitmentNov 30\, 11:45 a.m. EST Heidi Colle
 ran (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)\nThe impossibilit
 y of "natural fertility" in human cultural systemsDec 7\, 11:45 a.m. EST N
 aoko Matsumoto (Research Institute for the Dynamics of Civilizations\, Oka
 yama University)\nWhat’s so special about the Jomon?
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:DySoC / Exeter / UTK Webinar Series Evolution and Social Systems
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.utk.edu/event/dysoc_exeter_utk_webinar_serie
 s_evolution_and_social_systems
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
