Elman Service (1915 — 1986) was a cultural anthropologist.
During his time studying at the University of Michigan, Service joined the Abraham Lincoln Brigade in Spain to fight fascism. He also fought in WWII for the United States Army.
He was the Secretary-Treasurer of the American Ethnological Society and a member of the American Anthropological Association.
Elman Service defined four classifications of the stages of social evolution which are also the four levels of political organizations: band, tribe, chiefdom, and state.
He also developed the "managerial benefits" theory that states that chiefdom-like society developed because it was apparently beneficial, because of the centralized leadership. The leader provides benefits to the followers, which, over time, become more complex, benefiting the whole chiefdom society. This keeps the leader in power, and allows the bureaucratic organization to grow.
He also had an integration theory. He believed that early civilizations were not stratified based on property. They were only stratified based on unequal political power, not because of unequal access to resources. He believed there were no true class conflicts, but only power struggles between the political elite in early civilizations. The integration part of this theory was that monuments were created through volunteering, not the leaders forcing it upon the populace.
Anthropology | Cultural anthropology | American anthropologists | American ethnologists
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"Elman Service".
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