Abstract

Cultural evolutionists have long been interested in the problem of why fertility declines as populations develop. By outlining plausible mechanistic links between individual decision-making, information flow in populations and competition between groups, models of cultural evolution offer a novel and powerful approach for integrating multiple levels of explanation of fertility transitions. However, only a modest number of models have been published. Their assumptions often differ from those in other evolutionary approaches to social behaviour, but their empirical predictions are often similar. Here I offer the first overview of cultural evolutionary research on demographic transition, critically compare it with approaches taken by other evolutionary researchers, identify gaps and overlaps, and highlight parallel debates in demography. I suggest that researchers divide their labour between three distinct phases of fertility decline—the origin, spread and maintenance of low fertility—each of which may be driven by different causal processes, at different scales, requiring different theoretical and empirical tools. A comparative, multi-level and mechanistic framework is essential for elucidating both the evolved aspects of our psychology that govern reproductive decision-making, and the social, ecological and cultural contingencies that precipitate and sustain fertility decline.

Highlights

  • The global transition to low fertility is one of the most striking cultural convergences in human history

  • This review argues for a deeper integration of cultural evolution (CE) theory into demography, as a means to develop multi-level models of fertility decline that emphasize the coevolution of economic and cultural change and not the a priori privileging of one over the other

  • human behavioural ecologists (HBEs) is generally concerned with uncovering and understanding the costs and benefits of low fertility for individuals or lineages by examining constraints on fitness maximization, in particular how fundamental trade-offs, parental investment strategies and reproductive competition drive fertility outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

The global transition to low fertility is one of the most striking cultural convergences in human history. Little work has been done to synthesize different conceptual approaches [12,15,16], with little explicit focus on how cultural transmission contributes to—or derails—adaptive reproductive behaviour This is because many evolutionary anthropologists and demographers identify as human behavioural ecologists (HBEs), taking inspiration from animal models of behaviour in evolutionary biology and sharing common conceptual ground with economists [17]. They share interests in life-history theory, resource-allocation strategies, context-dependent adaptation and fitness optimization [18,19]. I offer some new directions that can generate novel hypotheses about the dynamics of fertility decline from an evolutionary perspective

Basic differences affecting how low fertility is interpreted
Cultural evolutionary models of fertility decline
Conceptual gaps and overlaps
Directions for future research
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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