Racial identity and the spatial assimilation of Mexicans in the United StatesPosted in Articles, Caribbean/Latin America, Census/Demographics, Media Archive, Mexico, Social Science, United States on 2011-11-20 21:37Z by Steven |
Racial identity and the spatial assimilation of Mexicans in the United States
Social Science Research
Volume 21, Issue 3 (September 1992)
pages 235-260
DOI: 10.1016/0049-089X(92)90007-4
Douglas S. Massey, Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs
Princeton University
Nancy A. Denton, Professor of Sociology
Center for Social and Demographic Analysis
State University of New York, Albany
Mexico’s national ideology holds that Mexicans are mestizos, a racially mixed group created by the union of Europeans and Indians. When Mexicans migrate to the United States, this mixed racial identity comes into conflict with Anglo-American norms that view race dichotomously, as Indian or white but not both. In this paper we examine the process of ideological assimilation by which Mexicans in the United States shift their identities from mestizo to white, and then measure the effect that race has on the level of residential segregation from non-Hispanic whites. Although residential barriers are not as severe for mestizos as for Hispanics of African heritage, we find that mestizos are significantly less likely than white Mexicans to achieve suburban residence and that this fact, in turn, lowers their probability of contact with non-Hispanic whites.
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