suutinsanan
Suutinsanan is a sociocultural concept used in anthropology and ethnography to describe a pattern of long-term reciprocal obligation and communal support that operates within and across kinship groups in coastal island communities. The term is applied to describe how households coordinate labor, pool resources, and sustain social ties through acts of giving, lending, and repayment that extend beyond immediate life cycles. In practice, suutinsanan is associated with non-market forms of exchange that help communities weather crises and seasonal fluctuations.
Origin and etymology are not tied to a single, widely attested language. In scholarly discussions, suutinsanan
Core features commonly linked to suutinsanan include reciprocal labor exchange, multi-household cooperation in harvesting or building,
Scholarly reception treats suutinsanan as a useful lens for examining non-market exchange and social capital. Critics