Abstract

The rift between evolutionary psychology and the biosocial model of gender relations impedes a fuller understanding of gender roles and gender inequality. In a novel evolutionary account that complements both existing theories, we highlight life history strategies as intermediate mechanism linking distal environmental forces to variations in gender relations. Specifically, traditional versus modernized gender roles are seen as shaped by present-oriented versus future-oriented reproductive strategies, which are sensitive to uncontrollable morbidity-mortality risks. Gender inequality stems from a combination of present-oriented reproductive strategies adapted to high-risk environments and dominance hierarchies resulting from societal competition (i.e., the probability of obtaining resources desired by others through personal efforts). By contrast, gender egalitarian values develop as people increasingly enact future-oriented reproductive strategies in a competitive but orderly and controllable environment, which is conducive to prestige hierarchies. The current account provides novel interpretations of phenomena ranging from sex differences in mate preference, sociosexuality, and sexism to cross-cultural variability in marital systems and cultural practices. All of these serve to support the view that gender relations are evolved, changeable, and influenced by the interaction between ecological and social environments in ways predicted by the life history mechanism.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Evolutionary Psychology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

  • Gender inequality stems from a combination of present-oriented reproductive strategies adapted to high-risk environments and dominance hierarchies resulting from societal competition

  • All of these serve to support the view that gender relations are evolved, changeable, and influenced by the interaction between ecological and social environments in ways predicted by the life history mechanism

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Summary

Nan Zhu and Lei Chang*

Specialty section: This article was submitted to Evolutionary Psychology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology. The current account provides novel interpretations of phenomena ranging from sex differences in mate preference, sociosexuality, and sexism to cross-cultural variability in marital systems and cultural practices All of these serve to support the view that gender relations are evolved, changeable, and influenced by the interaction between ecological and social environments in ways predicted by the life history mechanism. Life History Account of Gender Inequality reproductive goals are prioritized, sexual selection tends to exaggerate sex differences in the direction that favors traditional gender roles. Such a present-oriented strategy, when combined with dominance-based hierarchies shaped by agonistic, unrestricted competition (primarily among males), might contribute to gender inequality favoring men. We aim at expanding existing evolutionary explanations and furthering the understanding of environment-contingent variations of gender relations

PREVIOUS THEORIES OF GENDER RELATIONS
Effects of Extrinsic Risks on Gender Roles
Effects of Societal Competition on Gender Roles
Interaction Among Environmental Forces Affecting Gender Relations
IMPLICATIONS AND PREDICTIONS OF THE LIFE HISTORY ACCOUNT
Gender Roles Are Evolved and Changeable
Interaction Between Unpredictability and Societal Competition
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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