The multiple dimensions of racePosted in Articles, Media Archive, Social Science on 2016-04-04 01:07Z by Steven |
The multiple dimensions of race
Ethnic and Racial Studies
Published online 2016-03-21
DOI: 10.1080/01419870.2016.1140793
Wendy D. Roth, Associate Professor of Sociology
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
Increasing numbers of people in the United States and beyond experience ‘race’ not as a single, consistent identity but as a number of conflicting dimensions. This article distinguishes the multiple dimensions of the concept of race, including racial identity, self-classification, observed race, reflected race, phenotype, and racial ancestry. With the word ‘race’ used as a proxy for each of these dimensions, much of our scholarship and public discourse is actually comparing across several distinct, albeit correlated, variables. Yet which dimension of race is used can significantly influence findings of racial inequality. I synthesize scholarship on the multiple dimensions of race, and situate in this framework distinctive literatures on colourism and genetic ancestry inference. I also map the relationship between the multidimensionality of race and processes of racial fluidity and racial boundary change.
Read the entire article here.