Abstract
A new look at adoption is made possible with the use of software capable of computing social organization by examining residence, group membership, marriage, and the ownership and transmission of property using the scaffold of kinship. The Chuukese data set collected by the Goodenoughs and Fischer, and later compiled by Hyde, permits the study of residence as a means of clarifying population and resource flows, sheds new light on the data themselves, and offers new insight concerning the Fischer-Goodenough residence debate.