Dimensions of Self-Identification among Multiracial and Multiethnic Respondents in Survey InterviewsPosted in Articles, Census/Demographics, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2009-10-03 18:47Z by Steven |
Dimensions of Self-Identification among Multiracial and Multiethnic Respondents in Survey Interviews
Research supported in part by contract HHS 0009430486 from the National Center for Health Statistics.
Publication Date: 1997-12
ISSN: ISSN-0193-841X
Timothy P. Johnson
University of Illinois at Chicago
Jared B. Jobe
National Center for Health Statistics
Diane O’Rourke
University of Illinois at Urbana
Seymour Sudman
University of Illinois at Urbana
Richard Warnecke
University of Illinois at Chicago
Noel Chavez
University of Illinois at Chicago
Gloria Chapa-Resendez
University of Illinois at Chicago
Patricia Golden
National Center for Health Statistics
This paper reports findings from a laboratory study designed to investigate self identification among 69 multiracial and multiethnic women. Respondent reactions to two current questionnaire formats for collecting racial information, and a third version that includes a “multiracial” response option, were examined. Findings suggest that respondent’s racial identification varies considerably across question formats and that persons of mixed heritage prefer a racial identification question that provides them, at a minimum, with the opportunity to acknowledge their multi-cultural background. In addition, many respondents also expressed the desire to identify each of the specific groups that constitute their racial/ethnic background.
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