The papers collected in this volume present important information on the
history and culture of contemporary gathering and hunting peoples from
Canada, India, Africa, Australia and the Philippines. The volume focuses
on two themes: first, on the techniques which band-living foraging
peoples employ to organise their social and economic lives; and second,
on their fight for the right to their own lands and for a measure of
cultural and political autonomy. The contributors maintain that
gatherer-hunters are not examples of a disappearing way of life, but
peoples who have maintained their social and economic practices through
long periods of contact with stratified societies. The aim of this
volume it to make known to as wide an audience as possible the daily
lives, the patterns of relations between the sexes and the political
orientations of the world's contemporary foragers.