Serious interest in the evolution and dynamics of intermediate societies
has grown by leaps and bounds during the past decade. The purpose of
this volume is to suggest new ways to model the many stimuli and
processes by which cultural complexity emerges, emphasizing major
organizational changes, not the appearance and disappearance of specific
traits. All contributors share the view that it is time to fundamentally
reconsider a variety of ideas about the emergence of complex
organization. Their chapters present data from a broad range of case
studies, including the Northwest Coast and British Columbia Plateau,
California, the Plains, the Mississippian Southeast, the American
Southwest, Spain, and Northern Europe.