EAA 2023: Session #184

Title & Content

Title:
Material Wealth? New Approaches to the Archaeology of Social Inequality and Complexity
Content:
Over the last decade, social inequality has emerged as a major research area in the historical sciences. New methods for assessing wealth and living standards from the archaeological record have been developed, from the use of Gini coefficients on artefactual and architectural data to bioarchaeological approaches to health and wellbeing. These have been marshalled to make comparisons at a variety of geographical and temporal scales, and to discuss the causes and consequences of inequality in a wide range of societies. Through this work, a series of tensions have emerged. Broad scale studies covering long periods and large areas have recognised a general trend towards increasing inequality over time, often correlated with societal scale and levels of social development (broadly conceived), leading some to argue that complexity and inequality are functionally linked. However, more detailed studies have identified significant variability within this general trajectory, including cases where inequality is low despite high levels of material wealth, population and/or population density, and periods where inequality has decreased.

In this session we seek to deepen understanding of relationships between inequality, scale, living standards, and institutions. All of these are contested concepts, and data relating to them are not straightforward to extract from the archaeological record. As a result, we also focus on methodological innovation. We seek papers which address one or more of the following questions:

What are the strengths and weaknesses of quantitative approaches to inequality, such as Gini coefficients or cumulative distributions based on specific measures?

What are good proxies for measuring living standards within and between societies?

What social mechanisms have been responsible for increasing or reducing inequality in past societies?

Are there general relationships between societal scale, social development, and levels of inequality? How strong are these relationships?

What are the long-term consequences of social inequality for human societies?
Keywords:
Inequality, Social Complexity, Living Standards, Gini Coefficient, Household Archaeology, Political Economy
Format:
Regular session
Downloads:

organisers

Main organisers:
Dan Lawrence2
Co-organiser:
Scott Ortman1,3,4
Affiliations:
1 Center for Collaborative Synthesis in Archaeology
2 Durham University
3 Santa Fe Institute
4 University of Colorado Boulder

Abstracts

Abstract book ISBN:
These abstracts are part of this session:
The farming-inequality nexus, revisited: new insights from the GINI project
Social practices and inequality measurement in pre-Hispanic polities: Diachronic notes from Southern Andes
Sites, Systems and States: Exploring long term trends in wealth inequality and social complexity in ancient Southwest Asia
Money, mass and measurement: or, how can an archaeology of quantification clarify the long-term dynamics of inequality?
Significant changes? The development of social inequality during the prehistory in the Carpathian Basin
On the Mounds of Inequality: What Burial Mounds Reveal About the Wealthy in Prehistorical Central Europe
Burials, lake dwellings and trade routes. The development of social structures during Early Bronze Age at the Central Alps
Quantifying household inequality in Middle Helladic Greece
Scythian burial complexity and the dynamics of change in the Classical period
Dynamics of Inequality, Past and Present: Housing in Roman Britain and the Contemporary United States
Social networks, inequality, and the housing stock of Pompeii
The lifestile of the medieval nobility from 800 to 1500 in eastern Switzerland
Architectural inequalities - spatial distribution of wealth in preindustrial cities in Central Europe
Tracing inequalities through material culture. Post-medieval and contemporary archaeology from “scattered finds” to “total context”
Inequality where, marginality where. Methodological reflections on concepts and social relationships from the Mediterranean mountain (17th-21st c.)
Explaining Variability in Wealth Inequality: Reflections from the Global Dynamics of Wealth Inequality (GINI) Project