'... the most comprehensive, and perhaps only, review of the human child in terms of evolutionary biology and sociocultural anthropology. Based on the best of theory and field ethnography, it is essential for any study of human development and human nature.' Barry Bogin, Loughborough University
'The scholarship in this book is incredibly sound and thorough in breadth and scope.' Rebecca Zarger, University of South Florida
'David Lancy's The Anthropology of Childhood was essential the moment it appeared; the second edition is even better! He has digested the survey material even more, used updated materials, and held back less on his criticism of contemporary Euro-American childrearing.' Susan D. Blum, University of Notre Dame
'If I were to assign just one book as required reading for students of child psychology, this would be it. It opens our all-too-parochial eyes to childhood's possibilities.' Peter Gray, Boston College
'... a valuable forum to better understand childhood as a rapidly growing sub-field of anthropology.' Akira Takada, Kyoto University
'... this revised version of the volume is very welcome, providing students, teachers and generalists who are interested in the subject with a broad overview of the anthropology of childhood, supported by a comprehensive and helpfully interdisciplinary bibliography.' Sally Crawford FSA, University of Oxford
'... it [is] possibly the only book that new parents will ever need ... Perhaps the most surprising thing about The Anthropology of Childhood was how it taught me to value things that, in a cross-cultural perspective, might suddenly seem arbitrary: how we approach hygiene, for example, or teach etiquette.' The New York Times
'... an excellent addition to any library ... This work will be useful for any of the disciplines concerned with studies of the young.' J. Newberry, Choice
'This is a book of exceptional scholarly quality and breadth, highly recommended for all libraries, scholars and students interested in the study of children and childhood.' Chrysanthi Gallou, Childhood in the Past: An International Journal
'[This] book deserves a wide readership. The ethnographic material with its broad range of perspectives on childhood is refreshing and inspiring. Lancy explores the agency of children in raising themselves, finding their own paths and their influence on their peers, parents, and wider society. It cannot be ignored, when thinking about children's positions and positioning, that their lives and productive roles are embedded in the global structure of inequality and exploitation. In the end, Lancy has struck a fine balance between acknowledging these structural constraints and introducing the work of anthropologists who are providing new insights into the active role of children in society.' Sandra J. T. M. Evers, Anthropos