essay

Abortion and depopulation on a Pacific Island

health, culture, and community ; case studies of public reactions to health programsNew York • Published In 1955 • Pages: 211-235

By: Schneider, David Murray.

Abstract
The author was one of four anthropologists who spent nine months on Yap during 1947-1948 to study the problem of depopulation. The work was sponsored by Harvard University and the National Research Council. This particular paper concentrates on the problem of abortion on Yap and its relation to the allocation of responsibility and prestige in the society. Up to the age of about thirty, Yap men and women are still considered to be 'youths' whose chief occupation is to engage in intricate love affairs. This period of protracted youth is related to the fact that Yap is a stratified society where positions of prestige, responsibility and high rank, few in number as they are, are reserved for members of the older generation. Thus, freed of the responsibilities thrust upon men and women in other societies shortly after physiological maturity, young men and women on Yap can afford to preoccupy themselves with love making, which makes the long wait for status and prestige, coming as it does with full adulthood, more tolerable. The author believes that this preoccupation with love affairs has a significant bearing on the practice of abortion on Yap as well as on the possible prevalence of venereal infection. The author concludes his paper with a proposed program of birth control to eliminate the necessity for abortion.
Subjects
Conception
Abortion and infanticide
culture
Yapese
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
Oceania
Sub Region
Micronesia
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 1965
Field Date
1947-1948
Coverage Date
1947-1948
Coverage Place
Yap State, Federated States of Micronesia
Notes
David M. Schneider
Includes bibliographical references (p. 235)
LCCN
55010583
LCSH
Yapese (Micronesian people)/Yap (Micronesia)