Journal articles, book chapters, and lengthy comments
Chisholm, J.S. 1986. Social and economic change among the Navajo: Residence patterns and the pickup truck. In P. Bock (Ed.) Approaches to Culture and Society: Selected Articles, 1945 -85. Special Edition of The Journal of Anthropological Research, 42(3):289-298. [Reprint of Chisholm 1981a.] Chisholm, J.S. and Heath, G.D. l987. Evolution and pregnancy: A biosocial view of prenatal influences. In C. Super (Ed.) The Role of Culture in Developmental Disorder. New York: Academic. Chisholm, J.S. 1988. Toward a developmental evolutionary ecology of humans. In K. MacDonald (Ed.) Sociobiological Perspectives on Human Development. New York: Springer-Verlag. Chisholm, J.S. l989. Biology, culture, and the development of temperament: A Navajo example. In J.K. Nugent, B.M. Lester & T.B. Brazelton (Eds.) The Cultural Context of Infancy. Norwood, NJ: Ablex. Chisholm, J.S. 1990. Life history perspectives on human development. In G. Butterworth & P.E. Bryant (Eds.) Causes of Development: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. London: Harvester Wheatsheaf. Burbank, V.K. & Chisholm, J.S. l990. Old and new inequalities in a Southeast Arnhem and community: Polygyny, marriage age, and birth spacing. In J. Altman (Ed.) Emergent Inequalities in Aboriginal Australia. Sydney: Oceania Monographs. Chisholm, J.S. & Burbank, V.K. 1991. Monogamy and polygyny in Southeast Arnhem and: Male coercion and female choice. Ethology and Sociobiology, 12:291-313. Chisholm, J.S. 1992. Putting people in biology: Toward a synthesis of biological and psychological anthropology. In T. Schwartz, G. White & C. Lutz (Eds.) New Directions in Psychological Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. Burbank, V.K. & Chisholm, J.S. 1992. Gender differences in the perception of ideal family size in an Australian Aboriginal community. In B. Hewlett (Ed.) Father-Child Relations: Cultural and Biosocial Contexts. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine de Gruyter. Chisholm, J.S. 1993a. Death, hope, and sex: Life history theory and the development of reproductive strategies. Current Anthropology, 34(1):1-24. Chisholm, J.S. 1993b. Reply [I] to comments on "Death, hope, and sex: Life history theory and the development of reproductive strategies." Current Anthropology, 34(1):18-24. Chisholm, J.S. 1994. Reply [II] to comments on "Death, hope, and sex: Life history theory and the development of reproductive strategies." Current Anthropology, 35(1):39-46. Chisholm, J.S. & Wescombe, N. 1994. Evolution, attachment, and cultural learning. Comment on M. Tomasello, A. Kruger & H. Ratner's "Cultural Learning." Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 17(4):778-779. Chisholm, J.S. 1995a. Love's contingencies: The developmental socioecology of romantic passion. In W. Jankowiak (Ed.) Romantic Passion: A Universal Experience. New York: Columbia University Press (Pp. 42-56). Chisholm, J.S. 1995b. Life history theory and life style choice: Implications for Darwinian medicine. Perspectives in Human Biology, 1:19-28. Chisholm, J.S. 1996a. The evolutionary ecology of attachment organization. Human Nature,7(1):1-37. Chisholm, J.S. 1996b. Learning "respect for everything:" Navajo images of development. In P. Hwang, I. Sigel and M. Lamb (Eds.) Images of Childhood. Hillsdale, NJ.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Chisholm, J.S. 1996c. The evolutionary psychology of risk-taking in young males. In G. Robinson (Ed.) Aboriginal Health: Social and Cultural Transitions. Darwin, NT.: Northern Territory University Press. Pp. 124-128.
|