Journal Articles

  1. Read, JG, Measuring Ethnicity with U.S. Census Data: Implications for Mexicans and Arabs, Population Research and Policy Review, vol. 32 no. 4 (August, 2013), pp. 611-631, Springer Nature, ISSN 0167-5923 [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/17)

    Abstract:
    U.S. racial and ethnic populations can be defined by a number of census questions-race/ethnicity, ancestry, place of birth, and/or language-but little is known about how using alternative definitions of identity affect the size and characteristics of different groups. This article examines this question using combined data from the 1 % and 5 % Public Use Microdata Samples in census 2000, using Mexicans and Arabs as case studies. The analysis uses the standard method of classifying these groups (Hispanic origin and Arab ancestry) as a baseline to explore differences across the range of possible permutations of ethnic identity. In the Arab case, persons captured using alternative definitions of identity (Arabic language at home and/or born in an Arab country) are lesser educated, more likely to be in poverty, and more likely to identify as non-white or multi-racial than the Arab population as a whole. In contrast, persons in the Mexican alternative definition group (Mexican ancestry and/or born in Mexico) are more highly educated, less likely to be in poverty, and more likely to identify as white than the Mexican population as a whole. The article concludes with research and policy implications of these findings. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.


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