Racial demographics of the United States
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The United States is a diverse country racially. It has a majority of persons of White ancestry spread throughout the country. Racial and ethnic minorities are concentrated in coastal and metropolitan areas. The black or African American population is concentrated in the South with 70% of blacks living there, making up 20% of the population of the region. Asian Americans are concentrated mainly in the Western coastal areas. Hispanics and Latinos, an ethnic group with a membership that cuts across all the races, are concentrated in the Southwest, making up 25 percent of the region's population. The 2000 census also found Native Americans at their highest population ever, 4.5 million, since the U.S was founded in 1776.[1] Most live in the western half of the United States. The Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander population is found mostlly in Hawaii and California.
As of 2005, four states — California, Hawaii, New Mexico and Texas —[2] have "minority-majorities," where non-Hispanic whites are not a majority of their state populations. Ten other states have minority groups at over a quarter of their state populations, and 15 states where non-Hispanic whites are over 70% of their state populations. In 35 of the country's 50 largest cities, non-Hispanic whites are or soon will be in the minority.[3] Census statistics show that 45% of children under age 5 are from a racial or ethnic minority.[4]
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Americans, in part due to categories outlined by the U.S. government, generally are described as belonging to these racial groups:[5][1]
- White: those having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa
- Black or African American: those having origins in any of the black racial groups of Sub-Saharan Africa.
- American Indian or Alaska Native, also called Native Americans: those having origins in any of the original peoples of North, Central and South America, and who maintain tribal affiliation or community attachment
- Asian, also called Asian American: those having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, and the Indian subcontinent; frequently specified as Chinese American, Korean American, Filipino American, etc
- Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander: those having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands
- Some other race: those who, whatever their racial origins or heritage, don't feel comfortable choosing any of the foregoing categories. This category was intended to capture responses such as Mestizo, Creole, and Mulatto,[6] but among the write-in entries reported were South African, Moroccan, Belizean, Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban and others.[1]
- Two or more races, also known as the multiracial category: those who check off and/or write in more than one race. Any number, up to all six, of the foregoing racial categories can be reported by any respondent. This is the only category that does not appear on the Census form itself: these respondents are placed in this category during the Census' imputation process
Hispanic and Latino Americans have ancestry from Latin America or Spain.[5] On the census form this identity is reported via the Hispanic or Latino Origin question, known also as the Ethnicity question, which is separate from the Race question.[7][1] Self-identifying as being Hispanic or Latino and not Hispanic or Latino was neither explicitly allowed nor explicitly prohibited.[5] On the Race question, Hispanic and Latino Americans choose from among the same categories as all Americans: no separate racial category exists for Hispanic and Latino Americans, as they do not make up a separate race.[8] Thus each racial category contains Non-Hispanic or Latino and Hispanic or Latino Americans; for example: the White race category contains Non-Hispanic Whites and Hispanic Whites (White Hispanics); the Black or African American category contains Non-Hispanic Blacks and Hispanic Blacks (Black Hispanics); and likewise for all the other categories. See the section on Hispanics and Latinos in this article.
There has been interest by some, including the U.S. government, president George W. Bush and private individuals, in the elimination of racial and ethnic categories and new constitutional laws to prohibit the sampling of race in government practices[citation needed]. This concept was practiced in California by Proposition 209, passed in 1996 to prohibit the state's use of race in decisions on employment and college admissions. Proposition 54 in 2003 failed to pass; it would have made California the first state to officially abandon racial designation but allow the US census to collect racial data[citation needed].
Although "Asian American" also includes South Asian Americans — those whose ancestry originates in the countries of the Indian subcontinent: India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Maldives — the category is more popularly identified with East Asian Americans.[original research?] The term Black is popularly associated with centuries-long black residents, but the Census does not make distinctions between them and, say, recent Afro-Caribbean immigrants from Jamaica or refugees from Somalia. Furthermore, before the decision to allow multiple racial choices, the categories disregarded the multiracial heritage of many Americans. For these and other reasons, the broad categories which have traditionally been used to define race in America have come under much criticism.
Many Americans believe the subject of race is very sensitive and potentially offensive. They claim that to categorize people by their race is divisive. This thinking is especially associated with political correctness. Others respond that there are legitimate reasons why race is used by state and federal governments. The Census Bureau answers the question Why does the Census Bureau need to ask about race on its questionnaires?:
"Race is key to implementing any number of federal programs and it is critical for the basic research behind numerous policy decisions. States require race data to meet legislative redistricting requirements. Also, they are needed to monitor compliance with the Voting Rights Act by local jurisdictions. Federal programs rely on race data in assessing racial disparities in housing, income, education, employment, health, and environmental risks."[9]
Many Americans have protested census methods of racial classification because, in the past, to have non-white "blood" had a social stigma, until racial discrimination was outlawed in the 1960s. Conversely, today some critics decry what they perceive as preferential treatment for racial and ethnic minorities, who these critics say unfairly receive employment programs, student loans, college admissions and other awards by affirmative action policy. The critics call it reverse racism, and some states lifted or changed the policies in the 1990s as the debate over racial preferences continues.[citation needed]
A few critics even compared the practice of racial designation to historical uses in other countries, most notably in Apartheid South Africa until 1990, when it repealed its tough racial exclusion laws. They also compare it to the Nuremberg Laws of 1930s Nazi Germany, which classified Jewish Germans as a "race". This practice made German Jews suffer discrimination and ultimately end up as victims in the Holocaust. This is inflammable criticism on the potential dangers of using race to decide who gets more or less, or who's free or not. The U.S. constitution and civil rights laws prohibit racial oppression, but many Americans worry that racial discrimination continues to have adverse socioeconomic effects on millions of their fellow citizens.[citation needed]
In the 2000 census, the total US population was 281,421,906.
The majority of the 300 million people currently living in the United States consists of White Americans, who trace their ancestry to the original peoples of Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East, in many cases by way of other countries and regions (for example: Australia, Latin America, South Africa). Most White Americans are European American, descendants of immigrants who arrived since the establishment of the first colonies, but especially after Reconstruction. Whites composed 75.1% of the US population in 2000; non-Hispanic Whites accounted for 69.1 percentage points and White Hispanics for 6 percentage points.
The non-Hispanic White percentage tends to decrease every year, and this sub-group is expected to become a plurality of the US population by 2050. However, White Americans overall (non-Hispanic Whites plus White Hispanics) will remain the majority indefinitely.
In the 2000 Census, Americans were able to state their ancestries. The most frequently stated European-derived ancestries were:
German - (15.2%)
Irish - (10.8%) - Large percentage is actually of Scots-Irish descent particularly in the southern states
English - (8.7%) - This may be a serious undercount because in 1980 almost twice as many people claimed English ancestry
"American" - (7.2%) - Mostly of British (mainly English and Scottish/Scots-Irish, but also Welsh as well) ancestry that they are unaware about or cannot trace[citation needed]
Italian - (5.6%)
Polish - (3.2%)
French - (3.0%)
Scottish - (1.7%)
Dutch - (1.6%)
Norwegian - (1.6%)
Scots-Irish - (1.5%)
Swedish - (1.4%)
Russian - (0.9%)
French Canadian - (0.8%)
A county by county map of plurality ethnic groups reveals that the areas with the largest "American" ancestry populations were mostly settled by Scots-Irish, Scottish, English, and Welsh people. Even though a high proportion of the population has two or more ancestries, only slightly more than one ancestry was stated per person. This means that the percentages listed are significantly dependent on subjective perception of which of several ancestry lines is relevant. Many citizens listed themselves simply as "American" on the census (7.2%). Dutch and Hanoverians, whose countries were non-simultaneously in personal union with the British monarchy, settled in the British colonies, but more often retroactively seek identity in their respective countries today (Netherlands and Germany). This helps colonial diasporas fit in more with current nations. (See British American).
The largest Central European ancestry was Polish (both Catholic Poles and Ashkenazi Jews), and the largest Eastern European ancestry was Russian (includes a recent influx of Ashkenazi Jews). There were other significant ancestries from Central, Eastern and Southern Europe, as well as from French Canada. Most who registered as French American are descended from colonists of Catholic New France — exiled Huguenots quickly assimilated into the relevant British population of the Thirteen Colonies and were immediately seen and self-regarded as subjects of the Crown under the old Plantagenet claim. Other ethnic European origins included are Dutch/Belgian, Lithuanian, Latvian, former Yugoslavs, Greek, Hungarian, Portuguese, Czech, Slovak, Australian, New Zealander and Spanish. A comparatively small fraction of recent immigrants are non-Hispanic whites, but the largest numbers come from Canada, Poland, Russia, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom.
According to the 2000 Census, Middle Eastern Americans account for 0.42% of the American population. The largest subgroup was by far the Lebanese Americans, who made up 0.2% of the American population. Over 1/4 of all Arab Americans claimed two ancestries, having not only Arab blood but also non-Arab blood. Among them, 14.7% reported Irish, 13.6% reported Italian, and 13.5% reported German.
About 12.3% (2000 census)[1] of the American people are Black, most of whom are African American, themselves primarily descendants of the enslaved Africans brought to the U.S. between 1619 and the 1860s (although the slave trade was banned in 1808, smuggling of slaves from Africa and the Caribbean and elsewhere occurred for half a century) and emancipated during the American Civil War. Black Americans are the largest racial minority. (As opposed to Hispanics, who are the largest "ethnic" minority and the largest minority overall.) Starting in the 1970s, the black population has been bolstered by immigration from the Caribbean, especially Jamaica and Haiti. More recently, starting in the 1990s, there has been an influx of African immigrants to the United States, due to the instability in political and economic opportunities in various nations in Africa. Historically, most African Americans lived in the Southeast and South Central states of Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. Since World War I there occurred the Great Migration of rural black Americans to the industrial Northeast, urban Midwest and, in a smaller wave, to the West Coast that lasted until 1960. Today, most African Americans (over 70%) live in the Southern US[citation needed] and in urban areas, but are increasingly moving to the suburbs. In US history, any person with black or African American ancestry, even if they were mostly white, were designated and classified as "black", according to the now-defunct "one drop theory," by which any black/African ancestry made the person "black" in legal sense. Today, the US census in law and practice does not declare any person to belong in any race or ethnicity without the prior consent of that person.
A third significant minority is the Asian American population (3.6% in 2000[1]), most of whom are concentrated on the West Coast, with California home to 4.5 million Asian Americans, and Hawaii, where they compose the majority at 70% of the islands' people. Asian Americans live across the country as well as in New York, Chicago, Boston, Houston, and other urban centers. It is by no means a monolithic group. The largest groups are immigrants or descendants of immigrants from the Philippines, China, Pakistan, India, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, South Korea and Japan. While the Asian American population is generally a fairly recent addition to the nation's ethnic mix, relatively large waves of Chinese, Filipino and Japanese immigration happened in the mid to late 1800s.
Multiracial Americans numbered 6.8 million in 2000, or 2.4% of the population.[1] They can be any combination of races (White, Black or African American, Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, "Some other race") and ethnicities. The growing multiracial identity movement wants the US to recognize that there are millions of Americans who desire to identify by the full complement of their ancestry, if they happen to be biracial or multiracial. Miscegenation or inter-racial marriage, most notably between whites and blacks, was deemed immoral and illegal in most states in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries. California and the western US had similar laws to prohibit White-Asian American marriages until the 1950s. As society and laws change to accept inter-racial marriage, these marriages and their mixed-race children are possibly changing the demographic fabric of America. However, demographers state that the American people are mostly multi-ethnic descendants of various immigrant nationalities culturally distinct until assimilation and integration took place in the mid 20th century. The "Americanization" of foreign ethnic groups and the inter-racial diversity of millions of Americans isn't a new phenomenon.
Indigenous peoples of the Americas, such as American Indians and Inuit, made up 0.9% of the population in 2000.[1] An additional 1.6 million declared part-Native American or American Indian ancestry. The legal and official designation of who is Native American by descent aroused controversy by demographers, tribal nations and government officials for many decades. The blood quantum laws are complex and contradictory in admittance of new tribal members, or for census takers to accept any respondents' claims without official documents from the US Bureau of Indian Affairs. Genetic scientists estimated that over 15 million other Americans may be one quarter or less of American Indian descent. Once thought to face extinction in race or culture, there has been a remarkable revival of Native American identity and tribal sovereignty in the 20th century. The largest tribal group are the Navajo, who call themselves "Na'Dene" and live on a 16-million acre (65,000 km²) Indian reservation covering northeast Arizona, northwest New Mexico and southeast Utah. It is home to half of the 450,000 Navajo Nation members. The Cherokee are twice the size at 800,000 in full or part-blood degrees. 70,000 live in Oklahoma in the Cherokee Nation, and 15,000 in North Carolina on remnants of their ancestral homelands.
Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders numbered 398,835 in 2000, or 0.1% of the population.[1] Like Native Americans, especially most Native Hawaiians on the island chain of Hawaii are highly mixed with Asian, European and other ancestries. Only 1 out of 50 Native Hawaiians can be legally defined as "full blood" and some demographers believe that by the year 2025, the last full-blooded Native Hawaiian will die off, leaving a culturally distinct, but racially-mixed population. However, there is more individual self-designation of what is Native Hawaiian than before the US annexed the islands in 1898. Native Hawiians are receiving ancestral land reparations. Throughout Hawaii, the preservation and universal adaptation of Native Hawaiian customs, Hawaiian language, cultural schools solely for legally Native Hawaiian students, and historical awareness has gained momentum for Native Hawaiians as a people who are here to stay and grow.
Although it was intended to capture responses such as Mulatto and Mestizo,[6] two multiracial groups to which many Hispanics and Latinos belong, this is not a standard OMB race category. Responses such as Moroccan, Belizean, Mexican, and South African, were given in this category. In the 2000 census, 5.5% of the total population, 97% of whom were Hispanic, checked off this category.[1]
Most statistics from government agencies other than the Census Bureau (for example: the Center for Disease Control's data on vital statistics, or the FBI's crime statistics) omit "Some other race" and include the people in this group in the white population. In such cases, the statistics will include the vast majority of Hispanics in the white population. For an example of this, see the CIA Factbook.[10]
The US census has about 165 ethnic group designations alone. Some census respondents label themselves in various ways, but do not constitute a race, ethnicity or actual country in legal terms, e.g. "Jewish" if by descent (the census does not ask questions on religious membership), "Palestinian American", "Basque" (an ethnic group from France and Spain), "Confederate Southern" from the Southeast US, "Chicano", "Boricua", "Nisei" or Japanese American, "Desi" or Indian American, "Quebecois" or French Canadian, or "Cherokee American".
Americans of Latin American and Spanish origin do not form a race but an "ethnicity" known as Hispanics and Latinos,[5] the largest minority group in the country, composing 12.5% of the population in 2000. People of Mexican descent made up 6.5% of the US population in the 2000 census, and this ratio is expected to increase significantly in the coming decades. The Hispanic or Latino category is based on national origin, language and culture, not race, and is defined by the government as anybody from or with ancestry from Spain or Spanish-speaking Latin America, so a Hispanic may be of any race.[5][8]
In Census 2000, Hispanics identified as follows:[1] 47.9% White; 42.2% "Some other race"; 6.3% Two or more races; 2% Black or African American; 1.2% American Indian and Alaska Native; 0.3% Asian; and 0.1% Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander.
The "Some other race" respondents usually identify by their national origin only (e.g. "Mexican", "Salvadoran", "Colombian"); most are thought to be Mestizo, followed by unmixed American Indians and Mulattoes. In Census 2000 data, the "some other race" category overlaps by 97% with the Hispanic/Latino category, suggesting that this group is virtually the only one using the category.[11]
More than half of U.S. Hispanics are thought to be multiracial (Mestizo and Mulatto, especially), in which case the "Two or more races" category should be the largest one for them. This category is selected by checking off two or more of the others — i.e., the census form does not actually contain a "Two or more races" or "Multiracial" box;[1] the category is formed by grouping all respondents who selected more than one of the six racial categories. Thus, Mestizo Hispanics should check off "White" and "American Indian or Alaska Native", while Mulatto Hispanics should check off "White" and "Black or African American". However, it appears that many Mulatto and Mestizo Hispanics are unaware of this or reluctant to do it, likely because they assume that "White" refers exclusively to non-Hispanic White ancestry; that "Black" refers exclusively to non-Hispanic Black ancestry; and similarly that "Native American" refers exclusively to non-Hispanic Native American ancestry.
Indeed, on the census form itself, respondents who mark "Native American" are asked to name the "enrolled or principal tribe."[1] As many or most Hispanics and Latinos who are Native American are not connected to any tribe, this seems designed to prevent them from choosing Native American as a response. Some claim that the overuse of the "Some other race" category could be avoided by putting "Mestizo" and "Mulatto" directly on the census form. (Since these two are multiracial categories, their respondents could even be assigned/imputed to the "Two or more races" category.) It may be mostly due to the absence of these two options that a very large ratio (42%) of Hispanics report "Some other race" instead.
Brazilian Americans usually see themselves as being Latinos,[citation needed] but not Hispanics, since they are of Latin American heritage but are not connected to Spain and do not speak Spanish, having their roots in Portugal instead. The usage of "Latino" as being the same as "Hispanic" is interpreted by many of them as lack of knowledge of Latin American culture by the government of the United States, and many answer the census as "European" or "Caucasian".
The spectacular growth of the Hispanic population through immigration and higher birth rates are noted as a partial factor for the US’ population gains in the last quarter-century. The Bureau of the Census projects that by 2050 one-quarter of the population will be Hispanic.[12] Bureau figures show the U.S. population grew by 2.8 million between July 1, 2004, and July 1, 2005.[13] Hispanics accounted for 1.3 million of that increase.[14]
- Demography of the United States
- Immigration to the United States
- Maps of American ancestries
- Race in the United States
- Race and ethnicity in the United States Census
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: 2000
- ^ The Best Story of Our Lives
- ^ Asthana, Anushka (2006-08-21). Changing Face of Western Cities. Washington Post. Retrieved on 2007-06-25.
- ^ U.S. Population Is Now One-Third Minority - Population Reference Bureau
- ^ a b c d e Revisions to the Standards for the Classification of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity Office of Management and Budget
- ^ a b http://www.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/race/racefactcb.html Racial and Ethnic Classifications Used in Census 2000 and Beyond. Retrieved 2007-11-02
- ^ Short Form Questionnaire. U.S. Census Bureau
- ^ a b U.S. Census Bureau Guidance on the Presentation and Comparison of Race and Hispanic Origin Data. Retrieved on 2007-04-06. “Race and Hispanic origin are two separate concepts in the federal statistical system. People who are Hispanic may be of any race. People in each race group may be either Hispanic or Not Hispanic. Each person has two attributes, their race (or races) and whether or not they are Hispanic.”
- ^ U.S. Census Bureau Question & Answer Center
- ^ CIA - The World Factbook -- United States
- ^ Rodriguez, Clara E. 2000. Changing Race: Latinos, the Census, and the History of Ethnicity in the United States. New York: New York University Press.
- ^ More than 100 million Latinos in the U.S. by 2050
- ^ 300 Million and Counting
- ^ U.S. Census Bureau: Nation’s Population One-Third Minority
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