Pablo Delcán |
#Hispanics
are often described as driving up the nonwhite share of the population.
But a new study of census forms finds that more Hispanics are
identifying as white.
An
estimated net 1.2 million Americans of the 35 million #Americans
identified in 2000 as of “Hispanic, Latino or Spanish origin,” as the
census form puts it, changed their race from “some other race” to
“white” between the 2000 and 2010 censuses, according to research
presented at an annual meeting of the Population Association of America
and reported by Pew Research.
The
researchers, who have not yet published their findings, compared
individual census forms from the 2000 and 2010 censuses. They found that
millions of Americans answered the census questions about race and
ethnicity differently in 2000 and 2010. The largest shifts were among
Americans of Hispanic origin, who are the nation’s fastest growing
ethnic group by total numbers.
Race
is an immutable characteristic for many white, black and
Asian-Americans. It is less clear for Americans of Hispanic origin. The
census form asks two questions about race and ethnicity: one about
whether individuals are of Hispanic or Latino origin, and another about
race. “Hispanics” do not constitute a race, according to the census, and
so 37 percent of Hispanics, presumably dissatisfied with options like
“white” or “black,” selected “some other race.”
The
researchers found that 2.5 million Americans of Hispanic origin, or
approximately 7 percent of the 35 million Americans of Hispanic origin
in 2000, changed their race from “some other race” in 2000 to “white” in
2010. An additional 1.3 million people switched in the other direction.
A noteworthy but unspecified share of the change came from children who
weren’t old enough to fill out a form in 2000, but chose for themselves
in 2010.
The
data provide new evidence consistent with the theory that Hispanics may
assimilate as white Americans, like the Italians or Irish, who were not
universally considered to be white. It is particularly significant that
the shift toward white identification withstood a decade of debate over
immigration and the country’s exploding Hispanic population, which
might have been expected to inculcate or reinforce a sense of Hispanic
identity, or draw attention to divisions that remain between Hispanics
and non-Hispanic white Americans. Research suggests that Hispanics who
have experienced discrimination are less likely to identify as white.
The data also call into question whether America is destined to become a
so-called minority-majority nation, where whites represent a minority
of the nation’s population. Those projections assume that Hispanics
aren’t white, but if Hispanics ultimately identify as white Americans,
then whites will remain the majority for the foreseeable future.
White
identification is not necessarily a sign that Hispanics consider
themselves white. Many or even most might identify their race as
“Hispanic” if it were an explicit option. But white identification may
still be an indicator of assimilation. White identifiers are likelier to
be second- and third-generation Hispanics than foreign-born and
noncitizen Hispanics. They also have higher levels of education and
income. The researchers’ data did not show the country of origin of the
families of those people who shifted their identification.
The
results are a strong sign that fears of a unique “Hispanic challenge,”
where Hispanics immigrants might remain as a permanent Spanish-speaking
underclass, are overblown.
In that regard, the census numbers are not new: There is mounting evidence that Hispanics are succeeding in American society at a pace similar to that of prior waves of European immigrants.
Source: NY Times
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