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Kinship Network Analysis×Analyse des réseaux sociaux×Social Network Genealogy×
DomaineAnthropologyAnalyse de réseauxAnthropology
FamilleProcess / pipelineMachine learningProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine19921934 (sociometry); 1994 (modern formalization)1992
Auteur d'origineDouglas R. White & Paul JorionMoreno, J.L.; formalized by Wasserman & FaustDouglas R. White & Paul Jorion (network-genealogical approach)
TypeNetwork-analytic approach to kinship and marriage structureStructural/relational analysis frameworkReconstruction of social networks from genealogical records
Source fondatriceWhite, D. R., & Jorion, P. (1992). Representing and computing kinship: A new approach. Current Anthropology, 33(4), 454–462. DOI ↗Wasserman, S. & Faust, K. (1994). Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications. Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 978-0-521-38707-1White, D. R., & Jorion, P. (1992). Representing and computing kinship: A new approach. Current Anthropology, 33(4), 454–462. DOI ↗
AliasKinship Networks, P-Graph Analysis, Marriage Network Analysis, Network Approach to KinshipSNA, network analysis, sociometric analysis, relational analysisGenealogical Network Analysis, Network Genealogy, Genealogical Network Reconstruction, Social Network Genealogical Method
Apparentées252
RésuméKinship network analysis treats genealogies as graphs and applies network methods to study how marriage and descent structure a society. Pioneered by Douglas White and Paul Jorion's 1992 P-graph approach, it shifts the unit of analysis from the individual ego-centered family tree to the whole web of couples and parent-child links, making it possible to detect marriage rules, alliance patterns, and the circulation of people between groups that conventional kinship diagrams obscure.Social Network Analysis (SNA) is a structural method that maps and measures relationships and flows between people, groups, organizations, or other entities modeled as nodes connected by ties (edges). Rather than focusing on individual attributes, SNA reveals how the pattern of connections shapes behavior, influence, information flow, and outcomes within a system.Social network genealogy reconstructs the social structure of a community from genealogical and archival records by representing kin, marriage, and affinal ties as a network and applying social network analysis to it. Built on the network approach to kinship pioneered by White and Jorion, it uses descent and marriage links — often combined with other archival relations — to study cohesion, brokerage, status, and the rise and fall of social groups, especially in historical populations.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Kinship Network Analysis · Social Network Analysis · Social Network Genealogy. Consulté le 2026-06-25 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare