Southeast Asian American

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Southeast Asian American
Tran Quoc BinhAmapola CabaseTony DeZunigaWhilce Portacio
Total population

4,047,174
1.5% of the US population

Regions with significant populations
Alaska, California, Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Washington, D.C., West Coast
Languages
American English, Burmese, Hmong, Ilocano, Indonesian, Iu Mien, Khmer, Lao, Tagalog, Thai, Vietnamese, Visayan languages, others
Religions
Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Shamanism
Related ethnic groups
Asians and Asian American; Malay race, Tai peoples

Southeast Asian Americans are people who reside in the United States and are of Southeast Asian descent. They are classified as Asian in the 2000 United States Census, along with East Asian Americans and South Asian Americans.

The first documented presence of Southeast Asians in the present-day United States consisted of Filipinos who landed on October 18, 1587 at Morro Bay, California.[1] Filipinos established what they intended as permanent settlements at Saint Malo in southern Louisiana in 1763. The first Thai Americans settled in North Carolina in 1830. Sustained migration of Filipinos started in 1853, in the form of field laborers. Vietnamese Americans started to arrive in the United States in the 1970s, as brides of U.S. servicemen who were stationed in Vietnam; more sustained Vietnamese immigration occurred at the end of the Vietnam War. Cambodian Americans first immigrated to the United States as students sent abroad by their families. Larger groups of Cambodian Americans arrived as refugees after the 1975 takeover of Cambodia by the Khmer Rouge. Hmong Americans also arrived as refugees after 1975.

The most significant immigration of Southeast Asian Americans began in 1960 and continues to present day.


Southeast Asian American Ancestries in the 2000 US Census[2]
Ancestry 1990 1990 % of US population 2000 2000 % of US population Percent change from 1990 to 2000
Burmese negligible
(no data)
negligible
(no data)
16,720 0.006% negligible
(no data)
Cambodian 135,955 0.05% 197,093 0.07% increased 46%
Filipino 1,450,512 0.6% 2,116,476 0.8% increased 46%
Hmong 84,823 0.03% 140,528 0.05% increased 65.7%
Indonesian negligible
(no data)
negligible
(no data)
72,552 0.03% negligible
(no data)
Laotian 146,947 0.06% 204,284 0.07% increased 35%
Mien 60,000 0.02% 100,000 0.04% increased 67%
Thai 112,110 0.04% 169,801 0.06% increased 30.7%
Vietnamese 535,825 0.2% 1,029,420 0.4% increased 92.1%
Total 2,526,172 1% 4,047,174 1.5% increased 63%
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