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- Partible_paternity abstract "Partible paternity or shared paternity is a cultural conceptualization of paternity according to which a child is understood to have more than one father; for example, because of an ideology that sees pregnancy as the cumulative result of multiple acts of sexual intercourse. In societies with the concept of partible paternity this often results in the nurture of a child being shared by multiple fathers in a form of polyandric relation to the mother, although this is not always the case.All cultures recognize different types of fatherhood - for example the distinction between biological fatherhood and legal fatherhood, and the corresponding social roles of genitor and pater. The concept of partible paternity however differs from such a distinction because it considers all men who have had sexual intercourse with a woman immediately prior to and during her pregnancy to have contributed biological material to the child, and to have a corresponding legal or moral responsibility to care for it. The concept of partible paternity has been described in at least 18 different societies, most of them located in the Amazon such as the Araweté, Mehinaku, Tapirapé, Xokleng, and Wari'. And for several others including the Ache and the Kulina.Anthropologist Stephen Beckerman who has studied ideologies and practices of fatherhood among the Bari people of Venezuela, argue that partible paternity is adaptive, because it gives an advantage to children who have multiple male providers. He suggests a Bari child is 16% more likely than a single-fathered child to survive to the age of 15, probably due to improved nutrition. Among the Aché people of Eastern Paraguay, having multiple fathers appears to protect children from violence, the main cause of infant and child mortality. Evolutionary psychologist David Buss suggests that there must also be a downside to partible paternity, in the form of sexual jealousy.In ancient Hawaii, partible paternity was called poʻolua. Hawaiian king Kamehameha I is said to have two fathers.In The Gallic Wars, Book one, Chapter 14, Julius Caesar writes about the Celts who inhabited Kent in England: Ten and even twelve have wives common to them, and particularly brothers among brothers, and parents among their children; but if there be any issue by these wives, they are reputed to be the children of those by whom respectively each was first espoused when a virgin.".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageID "3126736".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageLength "5160".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageOutDegree "28".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageRevisionID "704995182".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Aché_people.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Alii_nui_of_Hawaii.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Amazon_basin.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Hawaii.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Araweté_people.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fatherhood.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Paternity.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Celts.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Commentarii_de_Bello_Gallico.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink David_Buss.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Father.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Julius_Caesar.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Kamehameha_I.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Kent.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Mehinako_people.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Motilon_people.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Paternity_(law).
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Polyandry.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Polygamy.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Poolua.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Pregnancy.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Sexual_intercourse.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Tapirapé_people.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Venezuela.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Virginity.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLink Wari’_people.
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLinkText "Partible paternity".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLinkText "other males".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageWikiLinkText "partible paternity".
- Partible_paternity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Partible_paternity subject Category:Fatherhood.
- Partible_paternity subject Category:Paternity.
- Partible_paternity hypernym Conceptualization.
- Partible_paternity type Right.
- Partible_paternity comment "Partible paternity or shared paternity is a cultural conceptualization of paternity according to which a child is understood to have more than one father; for example, because of an ideology that sees pregnancy as the cumulative result of multiple acts of sexual intercourse.".
- Partible_paternity label "Partible paternity".
- Partible_paternity sameAs Q7140408.
- Partible_paternity sameAs m.08t534.
- Partible_paternity sameAs Q7140408.
- Partible_paternity wasDerivedFrom Partible_paternity?oldid=704995182.
- Partible_paternity isPrimaryTopicOf Partible_paternity.