Sexual differences in violence from the perspective of evolutionary psychology: analysis of bioarchaeological data from Pre-Colonial Andean societies

Authors

  • Felipe Pinto dos Santos Universidad Federal de Pelotas

    Universidad Federal de Pelotas, Programa de Posgrado en Antropología, Laboratorio de Estudios de Antropología, Biología, Bioarqueología y Evolución Humana (LEAB-FURG).
    srfps7@gmail.com

  • Danilo Vicensotto Bernardo Universidad Federal de Rio Grande https://orcid/org/0000-0002-0429-9623

    Universidad Federal de Rio Grande (FURG), Laboratorio de Estudios de Antropología, Biología, Bioarqueología y Evolución Humana (LEAB-FURG).

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.202101.004

Keywords:

aggression, behaviour, human evolution, trauma, physical violence

Abstract

Motivated by an evolutionary look to understand the origins and circumstances of the practice of physical violence, this study analyzes quantitative data on head injuries in adult individuals, male and female, from pre-colonial Andean populations and discusses its results from the perspective of Evolutionary Psychology, particularly, to explain violent behaviour among males. The results point to a higher prevalence of males in the practice of violence and reveal aspects of the phenomenon that can be studied in the future, such as the differential circumstances of the occurrence of trauma related to gender in past populations.

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Published

2021-06-16

How to Cite

Pinto dos Santos, F., & Vicensotto Bernardo, D. (2021). Sexual differences in violence from the perspective of evolutionary psychology: analysis of bioarchaeological data from Pre-Colonial Andean societies. Boletín De Arqueología PUCP, (30), 77–92. https://doi.org/10.18800/boletindearqueologiapucp.202101.004