{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: The multifactor pelvis: An alternative to the adaptationist approach of the obstetrical dilemma. {Author}: Warrener A; {Journal}: Evol Anthropol {Volume}: 32 {Issue}: 5 {Year}: 2023 Oct 1 {Factor}: 4.766 {DOI}: 10.1002/evan.21997 {Abstract}: The obstetrical dilemma describes the competing demands that a bipedally adapted pelvis and a large-brained neonate place on human childbirth and is the predominant model within which hypotheses about the evolution of the pelvis are framed. I argue the obstetrical dilemma follows the adaptationist program outlined by Gould and Lewontin in 1979 and should be replaced with a new model, the multifactor pelvis. This change will allow thorough consideration of nonadaptive explanations for the evolution of the human pelvis and avoid negative social impacts from considering human childbirth inherently dangerous. First, the atomization of the pelvis into discrete traits is discussed, after which current evidence for both adaptive and nonadaptive hypotheses is evaluated, including childbirth, locomotion, shared genetics with other traits under selection, evolutionary history, genetic drift, and environmental and epigenetic influences on the pelvis.