inanan
Inanan is a term used in ethnographic literature to describe a central social practice of mutual support within the Inan communities. The word functions as both a noun and a verb, referring to an obligation to help kin and neighbors as well as the act of performing cooperative labor or care when needed. Etymology traces the term to the Inanan language, with proposed roots meaning together and care, though exact glosses vary by dialect.
Historically, inanan traditions emerged in rural riverine regions and became a cornerstone of social organization. In
Contemporary usage of inanan persists in settlements that emphasize communal forms of welfare. Anthropologists describe it
See also: mutual aid, communalism, social capital, kinship networks.