Daughters of Interracial Couples are More Likely To Say They are MultiracialPosted in Articles, Campus Life, Identity Development/Psychology, Latino Studies, Media Archive, Religion, Social Science, United States, Women on 2016-01-28 22:55Z by Steven |
Daughters of Interracial Couples are More Likely To Say They are Multiracial
TIME Magazine
2016-01-28
Study suggests it’s because they’re considered “intriguing.”
One of the fastest growing racial groups in the country isn’t a single racial group–it’s people from multiracial backgrounds, the children of interracial unions. A new study has found however, that young women are much more likely to call themselves multiracial than young men are.
Since 1967, when the Supreme Court declared state laws against interracial marriage unconstitutional in Loving vs.Virginia, the rate of interracial marriages in the United States has climbed from below one percent to 10% of all new marriages today.
And by 2050, as those numbers continue to rise, social scientists estimate that one out of every five Americans will be mixed-race.
How will this growing population choose to identify themselves? Will they embrace one parent’s background more than the other? Will they create a blend of the two? Or will they create something completely new?
To find out, Lauren Davenport, professor of political science at Stanford, sifted data from tens of thousands of incoming college freshmen with multi-racial backgrounds across the country…
Read the entire article here.