New Challenges in Measuring Race in the United StatesPosted in Census/Demographics, Media Archive, Papers/Presentations, Politics/Public Policy, United States on 2011-01-12 20:42Z by Steven |
New Challenges in Measuring Race in the United States
2010 National Conference on Health Statistics
Omni Shorem Hotel, Washington, D.C.
2010-08-17
46 pages/slides
Reynolds Farley, Research Professor Emeritus
University of Michigan
Population Studies Center at the Institute for Social Research
The Multiracial Movement of the 1990s [page/slide 2]
- After Census 1990, a small social movement developed calling for a fundamental change in the way the federal statistical system classified people by race. Susan Graham played an important role in this.
- Rather than forcing persons to identify with one single race only, they insisted upon the addition of a “Multiple Races” category.
- Some leading advocates of this change were white women married to African-American men who found that their children were almost always classified as black by those who collected statistical data or tabulated persons by race. See: Kim M. Williams, Mark One or More Civil Rights in Multiracial America
Who Identifies with Multiple Races? [page/slide 9]
- Age differences are great. In 2008, 5% of those under 10 were identified with two or more races; fewer than 1% for those over age 64 did so.
- Race differences are substantial. In 2008, 52% of the Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander population identified with a second race; 45% of American Indians did so. For whites, it was only 3%
- Educational Attainment differences in identifying with multiple races were small.
- Geographic Differences in Identifying with Two or More Races are Large. In 2008, 21% of the residents of Honolulu and 10% in Anchorage identified with 2 or more races. In Birmingham, Alabama, Jackson, Mississippi, Portland, Maine and Sarasota, Florida; fewer than 1% identified with 2 or more races.
Measuring Race Will Be Increasingly Challenging [page/slide 26]
- A substantial increase in interracial marriages implies that the multiple race population is growing rapidly
- There is widespread consensus that race is a social construct. Perhaps, many people wish to construct their own racial identity.
- Question order and question wording effects are very large
Read the entire presentation here.