Among hunter-gatherer societies, it's not just men doing the hunting

Publicly released:
Australia; International
Image by Mohamed Hassan from Pixabay
Image by Mohamed Hassan from Pixabay

Women have participated in hunting in at least 79% of hunter-gatherer communities over the past century, according to international experts. The researchers analysed ethnographic reports from the past 100 years documenting the activities of 63 foraging societies, including 15 Indigenous Australian communities. They say there is proof of women hunting within all societies where hunting is considered the most important way of feeding the community, challenging the previous assumption that men alone hunt while women gather plant-based food.

Media release

From: PLOS

Shattering the myth of men as hunters and women as gatherers

Data from foraging societies around the world show that women often hunt large game skillfully

Analysis of data from dozens of foraging societies around the world shows that women hunt in at least 79 percent of these societies, opposing the widespread belief that men exclusively hunt and women exclusively gather. Abigail Anderson of Seattle Pacific University, US, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on June 28, 2023.

A common belief holds that, among foraging populations, men have typically hunted animals while women gathered plant products for food. However, mounting archaeological evidence from across human history and prehistory is challenging this paradigm; for instance, women in many societies have been found buried alongside big-game hunting tools.

Some researchers have suggested that women’s role as hunters was confined to the past, with more recent foraging societies following the paradigm of men as hunters and women as gatherers. To investigate that possibility, Anderson and colleagues analyzed data from the past 100 years on 63 foraging societies around the world, including societies in North and South America, Africa, Australia, Asia, and the Oceanic region.

They found that women hunt in 79 percent of the analyzed societies, regardless of their status as mothers. More than 70 percent of female hunting appears to be intentional—as opposed to opportunistic killing of animals encountered while performing other activities, and intentional hunting by women appears to target game of all sizes, most often large game.

The analysis also revealed that women are actively involved in teaching hunting practices and that they often employ a greater variety of weapon choice and hunting strategies than men.

These findings suggest that, in many foraging societies, women are skilled hunters and play an instrumental role in the practice, adding to the evidence opposing long-held perceptions about gender roles in foraging societies. The authors note that these stereotypes have influenced previous archaeological studies, with, for instance, some researchers reluctant to interpret objects buried with women as hunting tools. They call for reevaluation of such evidence and caution against misapplying the idea of men as hunters and women as gatherers in future research. 

The authors add: “Evidence from around the world shows that women participate in subsistence hunting in the majority of cultures.”  

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