Study: Multiracial groups and social position, segregation in AmericaPosted in Articles, Census/Demographics, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2011-12-21 03:21Z by Steven |
Study: Multiracial groups and social position, segregation in America
The JHU Gazette
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore Maryland
2011-12-19
Amy Lunday, Homewood
The American social hierarchy places people of mixed-race ancestry below whites but above blacks, while additional social stratifications along color lines are simultaneously taking place within the nation’s multiracial groups, according to a Johns Hopkins University sociologist’s study of U.S. Census data.
Pamela R. Bennett, an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology in the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, studied the residential location of people who identified themselves with more than one racial group when filling out their 2000 and 2010 census forms…
…In both cases, she found that multiracial groups occupy a social position between blacks and whites, and that the multiracial groups themselves have their own racial stratifications. Bennett found a lesser degree of segregation among people who are of both black and white heritage when compared to those whose identities are fully black. Yet the black-white multiracials appear to be more segregated than Asian-white or American Indian–white multiracials across several segregation measures…
Read the entire article here.