Social Networks in the Distant Past (ASW 27-2) (Hardcopy)

Issue editor: Matthew Peeples

In the age of Facebook and Twitter, “social network” is a phrase heard or read almost daily. Most of our readers will have a general concept of social networks through their familiarity with these communication tools. Yet, social networks are a mainstay of the human experience, not a product of new technologies.

Articles in this issue describe analyses conducted by Southwest Social Networks (SWSN) project team members using the SWSN database and social network analysis methods. Although these analyses draw on somewhat different techniques and evidence, they all center on related questions. How did patterns of interaction and exchange change through time at local and regional scales? How might the structure and organization of networks of interaction among settlements have influenced the long-term success or failure of settlements or regions? How did the arrival of a relatively small number of northern immigrants to the mountains and deserts of the southern Southwest affect the network landscape of the region as a whole?

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In this issue

Social Networks in the Distant Past: The Late Precontact Southwest — Barbara J. Mills, Jeffery J. Clark, Matthew A. Peeples, W. R. Haas, Jr., John M. Roberts, Jr., J. Brett Hill, Deborah L. Huntley, Lewis Borck, Ronald L. Breiger, Aaron Clauset, and M. Steven Shackley

Proximity: What role did nearness play in creating social networks?

Pottery: How do decorated ceramics enable us to reconstruct social networks?

Obsidian: What does a sudden expansion in its exchange imply?

Brokers: Where were the middlemen? What was their role?

Internal and External Relations: Why were some groups less vulnerable to crises?

Interactions in Turbulent Times: Insights Revealed by Social Network Analyses

Collaborations: More Than the Sum of Their Parts

Back Sight — William H. Doelle, Archaeology Southwest

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Weight 0.3000 lbs