![]() | Study programme 2025-2026 | Français | |
![]() | Elements of Economic Anthropology | ||
Programme component of Bachelor's in Human and Social Sciences (MONS) (day schedule) à l"School of Human and Social Sciences |
| Code | Type | Head of UE | Department’s contact details | Teacher(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UH-BM-SCHUMS-813-M | Optional UE | MAES Renaud | H930 - Sciences Humaines et Sociales |
|
| Language of instruction | Language of assessment | HT(*) | HTPE(*) | HTPS(*) | HR(*) | HD(*) | Credits | Weighting | Term |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Français | 22 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 4.00 | 1st term |
| AA Code | Teaching Activity (AA) | HT(*) | HTPE(*) | HTPS(*) | HR(*) | HD(*) | Term | Weighting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Elements of Economic Anthropology | 22 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Q1 | 100.00% |
| Programme component |
|---|
Objectives of Programme's Learning Outcomes
Learning Outcomes of UE
At the end of the class, students will be able to relativize their absolute certainties concerning the economy. They will be able to perceive the limits and the issues generated by the mere transposition of their knowledge to different societies, where the "economic fact" is of a strikingly different as that which is observed in the frame of the monetarized market economy. Doing so, they will be forced to acknowledge that there exist various rationalities and will be steered towards deconstructing several commonplaces (that of rarity, notably) as well as establishing links between social dynamics (kinship, for instance) and economic behaviour.
UE Content: description and pedagogical relevance
5 themes are tackled during the class:
-access to natural resources and to production means
-timetable and proceedings of work processes
-circulation and redistribution of the work products
-modes of consumption and expenditure
- the creation of valor and the commoditization process
They are approached through five lessons:
Lesson 1: Hunter-Gatherers societies: the issue of resources rarity/abundance and of cultural choices
Lesson 2: Farmer Societies: subsistence and cash crop agricultures
Lesson 3: Reciprocity and Market: logic and forms of gift and counter-gift
Lesson 4: Logics halfway between barter, market economy and gift: consumption and expense behaviors
Lesson 5: Cultural objects and commodities, the biography of things, exchange spheres
Prior Experience
Not applicable
Type of Teaching Activity/Activities
| AA | Type of Teaching Activity/Activities |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 |
|
Mode of delivery
| AA | Mode of delivery |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 |
|
Required Learning Resources/Tools
| AA | Required Learning Resources/Tools |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Not applicable |
Recommended Learning Resources/Tools
| AA | Recommended Learning Resources/Tools |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Not applicable |
Other Recommended Reading
| AA | Other Recommended Reading |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Not applicable |
Grade Deferrals of AAs from one year to the next
| AA | Grade Deferrals of AAs from one year to the next |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Authorized |
Term 1 Assessment - type
| AA | Type(s) and mode(s) of Q1 assessment |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 |
|
Term 1 Assessment - comments
| AA | Term 1 Assessment - comments |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Assessment takes the form of an oral examination. Students choose a question from a list of questions covering all the content covered in the course, and prepare a brief presentation on the chosen question (10 minutes). Their presentation is followed by a discussion of the issues raised. |
Resit Assessment - Term 1 (BAB1) - type
| AA | Type(s) and mode(s) of Q1 resit assessment (BAB1) |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 |
|
Resit Assessment - Term 1 (BAB1) - Comments
| AA | Resit Assessment - Term 1 (BAB1) - Comments |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Not applicable |
Term 3 Assessment - type
| AA | Type(s) and mode(s) of Q3 assessment |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 |
|
Term 3 Assessment - comments
| AA | Term 3 Assessment - comments |
|---|---|
| H-SANT-200 | Assessment takes the form of an oral examination. Students choose a question from a list of questions covering all the content covered in the course, and prepare a brief presentation on the chosen question (10 minutes). Their presentation is followed by a discussion of the issues raised. |