Most offspring were from monogamous pairs, but a few cases consistent with polygyny by males or sequential polyandry by females were also found. |
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These days, polygyny is achieved in Western culture through serial monogamy. |
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Although most Hmong men had one wife, polygyny, or marriage with several women, was an accepted practice. |
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On rare occasions, birds such as American redstarts, hooded warblers, and black-throated blue warblers engage in polygyny. |
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However, failing to find differential receptiveness does not disaffirm this possibility if the polygyny allele is fixed in the population. |
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Thus the expectations regarding the strength of sexual selection for polygyny, polyandry, and monogamy are fairly simple. |
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Polygyny is legal, and couples have the option of choosing between monogamy and polygyny when they enter into a civil marriage. |
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In the absence of inbreeding, the most extreme value of coancestry is achieved by male polygyny together with female philopatry. |
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Serial monogamy is a common marriage pattern and polygyny is practised by a few. |
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In the past Coras practiced polygyny, with a man marrying several sisters, but this practice is dying out. |
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However, the degree of dimorphism in some clades of mammals, including perissodactyls, does not correlate with the degree of polygyny. |
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It is also likely that if an inquiry into polygyny in Canada were undertaken by CEDAW, its scope would extend beyond the Bountiful context. |
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Legislation has improved women's inheritance and property rights and has prohibited forced marriage and polygyny. |
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This reticence should not be interpreted, however, as a dilution of the consensus that polygyny violates international human rights law. |
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It is this equality in rights and responsibilities that asymmetrical marital practices such as polygyny violate. |
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This type of reasoning could similarly be applied to the practice of polygyny. |
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Within impoverished societies, for example, polygyny was, and is still by some, thought to serve a protective function for poor women. |
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This reasoning can similarly be applied to cases where petitioners are seeking to be governed by religious family law that permits polygyny. |
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Specifically, polygyny undermines the rights of women and children in relation to family life, security, and citizenship. |
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Satlow then discusses levirate marriage, polygyny and concubinage. |
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From then on, polygyny replaced polyandry as a marital practice. |
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As a general term, polygamy therefore includes the practices of bigamy, polyandry, and polygyny. |
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For instance, in the practice of polygyny, each wife is typically allotted her own house, most often within the same compound as the other wives but sometimes elsewhere. |
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Bretschneider's recent cross-cultural study of polygyny, however, does not support this supposition. |
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As male territoriality is consistent with female defense polygyny, territorial males should be more likely to sire the entire litter of territorial dams sharing his territory. |
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Another potent example of Canon Law not being enforced is in regards to polygyny. |
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Though foxes are largely monogamous, DNA evidence from one population indicated large levels of polygyny, incest and mixed paternity litters. |
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Defense polygyny involves males controlling territories that contain resources that attract females. |
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Several rodent species have flexible mating systems that can vary between monogamy, polygyny and promiscuity. |
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Here, the Court was clear that patrilocal polygyny not only undermines a wife's right to familial privacy, but can also be extremely detrimental to her personal honour. |
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Descent is matrilineal, and polygyny is practiced. |
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In requiring girls and women to adopt service roles from a young age, polygyny as practised in this context reifies women's central role as one of servitude. |
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In this way, polygyny and reproductive stereotyping reinforce each other. |
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Before examining the economic deprivation associated with the practice, however, it is important to consider whether polygyny as practised in some contexts may in fact increase familial wealth. |
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Several treaty bodies, including CEDAW, the HRC, the CESCR, and the CRC, have stated in their concluding observations that polygyny violates the rights articulated within their respective treaties. |
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We also know that, at least amongst the Gaulish and the early medieval Irish nobility, polygyny was a widespread practice. |
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The mating system of pinnipeds varies from extreme polygyny to serial monogamy. |
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In Central Australia anthropologists claim that white men were responsible for the disappearance of polygyny and gerontocracy practices. |
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Mating among rodents can vary from monogamy, to polygyny, to promiscuity. |
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This differs from polyandry and polygyny, which are contractual. |
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Although polyandry exists, polygyny is the most common form of polygamy. |
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Monogyny and polygyny in ponerine ants with or without queens, pp. |
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There is also an association with polygyny which may be due to higher pathogen load, making selecting males with a high genetic resistance increasingly important. |
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Polygyny and polyandry are not allowed, and it is forbidden to marry close family and kin members. |
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Polygyny in that group may be associated with male territoriality and defensibility of nesting resources. |
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