The Plight of Mixed Race AdolescentsPosted in Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Papers/Presentations, United States on 2009-10-26 17:43Z by Steven |
The Plight of Mixed Race Adolescents
First Draft: August 2005
This Version: July 2008
Roland G. Fryer, Jr., Professor of Economics
Harvard University and NBER
Lisa Kahn, Assistant Professor of Economics
Yale School of Management
Steven D. Levitt, William B. Ogden Distinguished Service Professor of Economics
University of Chicago and American Bar Foundation
Jörg L. Spenkuch
University of Chicago
Over the past 40 years the fraction of mixed race black-white births has increased nearly nine-fold. There is little empirical evidence on how these children fare relative to their single race counterparts. This paper describes basic facts about the plight of mixed race individuals during their adolescence and early adulthood. As one might expect, on a host of background and achievement characteristics, mixed race adolescents fall in between whites and blacks. When it comes to engaging in risky/anti-social adolescent behavior, however, mixed race adolescents are stark outliers compared to both blacks and whites. We argue that these behavioral patterns are most consistent with the “marginal man” hypothesis, which we formalize as a two-sector Roy model. Mixed race adolescents—not having a natural peer group—need to engage in more risky behaviors to be accepted. All other models we considered can explain neither why mixed race adolescents are outliers on risky behaviors nor why these behaviors are not strongly influenced by the racial composition at their school.
Read the entire paper here.