Bibliographic Information

Human territorial functioning : an empirical, evolutionary perspective on individual and small group territorial cognitions, behaviors, and consequences

Ralph B. Taylor

(Cambridge series in environment and behavior)

Cambridge University Press, 1988

  • : hard
  • :pbk

Available at  / 34 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

'Territorial functioning' refers to an interlocked system of sentiments, cognitions, and behaviors that are highly place-specific, and socially and culturally determined and maintaining. In this book, Ralph Taylor explores the consequences of human territorial functioning for individuals, small groups, and the ecological systems in which they operate. His exploration is illuminated by his evolutionary perspective, and grounded in empirical studies by social scientists and in theoretical work on the evolution of social and spatial behaviors. He systematically reviews the related research and theory, and indicates the importance of territorial functioning to current social and environmental problems. Contrary to popular wisdom, he argues that territorial functioning is relevant only to limited locations, such as street blocks, and not to neighborhoods or nation states, and that it reduces conflicts and helps maintain settings and groups. His theoretically focused examination of all that has been discovered about human territorial functioning will interest a wide variety of environmental psychologists and designers, urban sociologists, social psychologists, planners, and ethologists, and their students.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • Part I. Origins of Human Territorial Functioning: 2. Territorial Functioning and Related Processes in Different Species
  • 3. The Origins of Human Territorial Functioning
  • 4. Theoretical Perspectives on Interpreting Territorial Functioning: Exactly How did it Evolve?
  • Part II. A Conceptual Model of Human Territorial Functioning: 5. A Perspective on Human Territorial Functioning
  • 6. Clarifying Psychological and Ecological Consequences
  • Part III. Territorial Functioning in Settings of Varying Centrality: 7. Interior Residential Settings
  • 8. Territorial Functioning in Outdoor Residential Spaces Close to the Home
  • 9. Regular Use Settings
  • 10. Minimal Territorial Functioning
  • Part IV. Applications to Social Problems: 11. Disorder
  • 12. Resource Conservatism
  • Part V. Review and Prospects: 13. Summary of the General Line of Argument and its Implications
  • 14 Future Directions for Research and Application.

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