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Revitalizing the study of kinship and exchange with network approaches Part I. Representing Kinship Dynamics, Material Flow, and Economic Co-operation: 2. The grapevine forest: kinship, status and wealth in a Mediterranean community (Selo, Croatia) 3. Kinship, property transmission, and stratification in Javanese villages 4. Ambilateral sideness among the Sinhalese: marriage networks and property flows in Pul Eliya (Sri Lanka) 5. Alliance, exchange, and the organization of boat corporations in Lamalera (E. Indonesia) Part II. Individual Embeddedness and the Larger Structure of Kinship and Exchange Networks: 6. Experimental flexibility of cultural models: kinship knowledge and networks among individual Khasi (Meghalaya, N. E. India) 7. Moral economy and self-interest: Kinship, friendship and exchange among the Pokot (N. W. Kenya) 8. Risk, uncertainty and economic exchange in a pastoral community of the Andean Highlands (Huancar, N. W. Argentina) Part III. Marriage, Exchange and Alliance: Reconsidering Bridewealth and Dowry: 9. Wealth transfers occasioned by marriage: a comparative reconsideration 10. Prestations and progeny: the consolidation of well-being among the Bakkarwal of Jammu and Kashmir 11. 'We Don't Sell our Daughters': a report on money and marriage exchange in the township of Larantuka (Flores, E. Indonesia) Part IV. Emergence, Development and Transformation of Kin-Based Exchange Systems: 12. Applications of the minimum spanning tree problem to network analysis 13. Local rules, global structures: models of exclusive straight sister-exchange 14. The capacity and constraints of kinship in the development of the Enga Tee Ceremonial exchange network (Papua New Guinea Highlands) 15. Between war and peace: gift exchange and commodity barter in the central and fringe Highlands of Papua New Guinea.
Faust et al. (Wed,) studied this question.