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Many Resist Race Labels In U.S. Census

Census Forms

By HOPE YEN   01/31/12 06:22 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON -- When the 2010 census asked people to classify themselves by race, more than 21.7 million – at least 1 in 14 – went beyond the standard labels and wrote in such terms as "Arab," "Haitian," "Mexican" and "multiracial."

The unpublished data, the broadest tally to date of such write-in responses, are a sign of a diversifying America that's wrestling with changing notions of race.

The figures show most of the write-in respondents are multiracial Americans or Hispanics, many of whom don't believe they fit within the four government-defined categories of race: white, black, Asian/Pacific Islander or American Indian/Alaska Native. Because Hispanic is defined as an ethnicity and not a race, some 18 million Latinos used the "some other race" category to establish a Hispanic racial identity.

"I have my Mexican experience, my white experience but I also have a third identity if you will that transcends the two, a mixed experience," said Thomas Lopez, 39, a write-in respondent from Los Angeles. "For some multiracial Americans, it is not simply being two things, but an understanding and appreciation of what it means to be mixed."

Lopez, 39, the son of a Mexican-American father and a German-Polish mother, has been checking multiple race boxes since the Census Bureau first offered the option in 2000. Marking off the categories of Hispanic-Mexican ethnicity, "other" Hispanic ethnicity and a non-Hispanic white race, Lopez opted in 2010 to go even further. He checked "some other race" and scribbled in a response: "multiracial."

More than three million write-ins came from white and black Americans who appear to have found the standard race categories insufficient. They include Arabs, Iranians and Middle Easterners, who don't fully view themselves as "white" and have lobbied in the past to be a separate race category. They are also Italians, Germans, Haitians and Jamaicans who consider ancestry a core part of who they are.

Roughly half a million black Americans – between 1 and 2 percent of their total population – wrote in answers to signify their preferred term for black. Among them: African-American, Afro-American, African, Negro, mulatto, brown and coffee. More than 36,000 described themselves as "Negro" in whole or in part. The term, which was listed as an example on the 2010 census form, drew criticism from some black groups for being outdated and insensitive.

Lopez, a mechanical engineer who helps run a multiracial awareness group, said he believes the government should provide a wider range of choices on survey forms. "Right now there's a significant segment of the population who feel that the boxes do not adequately represent them," he said.

While the issue of racial identity can be deeply individual, it is also highly political: census data are used to enforce anti-discrimination laws, to distribute more than $400 billion in federal aid for roads, schools and health care, and to draw political districts based in part on a community's racial makeup. Over the past decade, the number of people identifying as "some other race" jumped by 3.7 million, or 24 percent. Experts say an increase in the write-in responses could signify limitations to the form and potentially skew government counts.

"It's a continual problem to measure such a personal concept using a check box," said Carolyn Liebler, a sociology professor at the University of Minnesota who specializes in demography, identity and race. "The world is changing, and more people today feel free to identify themselves however they want – whether it's black-white, biracial, Scottish-Nigerian or American. It can create challenges whenever a set of people feel the boxes don't fit them."

In an interview, Census Bureau officials said they have been looking at ways to improve responses to the race question based on focus group discussions during the 2010 census. The research, some of which is scheduled to be released later this year, examines whether to include new write-in lines for whites and blacks who wish to specify ancestry or nationality; whether to drop use of the word "Negro" from the census form as antiquated; and whether to possibly treat Hispanics as a mutually exclusive group to the four main race categories.

"Part of our research efforts moving forward is to examine what is happening when you see more people writing in responses," said Nicholas Jones, chief of the Census Bureau's racial statistics branch.

Jonathan Brent, 28, an attorney in Charlottesville, Va., said he was able to select the race boxes he needed to indicate his multiracial identity – part white, and part Asian-American, with an individual check box available to indicate Japanese. But he said others do not always find the boxes to describe themselves.

On the census form, currently only the Asian/Pacific Islander and American Indian/Alaska Native race categories have separate boxes and write-in lines to specify ancestry; those write-in answers are broken down in official census results.

Other findings from the data:

_About 2.8 million people wrote in responses falling in the white category. The answers, used to describe themselves in whole or in part, included Italian (307,000); Iranian (289,000); Arab (241,000); Armenian (185,000); German (140,000); Irish (126,000); Caucasian (123,000); Middle East (114,000); and Polish (113,000).

_Roughly 1 million respondents were in the black category. They wrote the following terms to describe themselves in whole or in part: black (366,000); Haitian (222,000); African-American (137,000); Jamaican (104,000); West Indies (83,000); African (73,000); Ethiopian (46,000); Negro (36,000); Trinidad and Tobago (34,000); Nigerian (15,000); and Afro-American (7,000).

_Some 18 million were from Latinos who indicated a Hispanic origin both as an ethnicity and race; they checked "some other race" rather than a standard category of white or black. Their answers included Mexican (8.7 million); Hispanic (5.1 million); Latin American (2 million); Puerto Rican (865,000); Spanish (531,000); Salvadoran (332,000); and Dominican/Dominican Republic (295,000).

_Among multiracial Americans, commonly used terms were mixed (156,000); biracial (77,000); brown (62,000); multiracial (38,000); mulatto (34,000); Eurasian (11,000); Amerasian (9,000); multiethnic (4,700); and interracial (2,700).

The 21.7 million people who wrote in race responses is a baseline number. Not included are people who wrote in answers such as "American," "human being," or "person," which were excluded from the tally as race-neutral terms. A separate census tally of those terms has not yet been done. A 2010 sample survey by the Census Bureau estimated that roughly 20 million people in the U.S. indicated "American" when asked to identify part of their ancestry.

Roderick Harrison, a Howard University sociologist and former chief of racial statistics at the Census Bureau, predicted a wider range of responses and blurring of racial categories over the next 50 years as interracial marriage becomes increasingly common. Still, he said racial categories will continue to be relevant so long as racial gaps persist in educational attainment, income, jobs and housing.

"These histories of exclusion, discrimination, and racism are central to the identities of several minority populations," he said.

___

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WASHINGTON -- When the 2010 census asked people to classify themselves by race, more than 21.7 million – at least 1 in 14 – went beyond the standard labels and wrote in such terms as "Arab...
WASHINGTON -- When the 2010 census asked people to classify themselves by race, more than 21.7 million – at least 1 in 14 – went beyond the standard labels and wrote in such terms as "Arab...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TankGirlz
Lyrical Combat
07:17 PM on 02/02/2012
I just mark all of them.
04:00 PM on 02/02/2012
Really??? 36,000 people identify themselves as "Negro"? C'MON MAN haha
11:03 AM on 02/02/2012
People need to learn the definitions of race, ethnicity, and nationality. Anyone who lists a country as their race is really clueless.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
06:47 PM on 02/02/2012
Bottomline. You identify with the oppressor race...that makes you an oppressor.
11:03 PM on 02/01/2012
Here's my massive generalization for the day: it seems that there are more black people who spend their time trying to remind people they're black. They always use a line about how the world or more specifically white people will never see you as anything but black. So what if white people don't. That does not mean you need to spend your time reminding others of who you think they are as if it benefits you personally. You have no idea what everyone experiences. Box yourselves in but why is it so important to box everyone else in as well? If white people don't know how "hard it is for you," then how do you know what they're all thinking about? Too many kids who have never ever met a white person are told how white people see them this way and are out to ruin their lives. All of that stupidity they are taught is sure to stunt their progress more than any white person probably will ever. If Tiger Woods doesn't want to be black that's his business not mine. If this "black support system" couldn't stop all those black men from ending up in prison, then what's it supposed to do for Tiger Woods?
11:05 AM on 02/02/2012
Why is it important to you? I do agree with your comment that how people address this issue is their business and not yours.
09:53 PM on 02/03/2012
Wow, way to overgeneralize! Your overgeneralization of black folks is rather ironic: you tell black folks not to stereotype whites, and there you are doing the same thing to black people! You must understand that your personal experience with certain black people isn't representative of the population at large. This is something I recall learning in a class called, "logic." By the way, I'm black, and I can't relate to what you're saying - I've never said any of the stuff "we" supposedly say, and I don't feel the need to remind anyone of what race I am.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hammer0311
Govt is the problem
11:31 AM on 02/01/2012
no doubt about it, to much money in hate for it go away
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OooZzzzz
OooZzzzz
09:52 AM on 02/01/2012
You can't run/hide from your Blackness, no matter how hard you try to deflect/run in those "other" circles that many consider "non Black" trying/identify as something else to mentally feel better about yourself is a lie that many need to stop living because in the real world outside your comfort zone, doesn't cut where your judged/viewed first by color, not your character.

A friend's daughter is a junior attending a major university.

All her friends in high school (except one) are White; best friends and since they're White, she felt her transition meeting/making White friends in college wouldn't be a problem.

She tried/constantly got rejected and that included her 3 White roommates who took a rather long time to warm up to her because that initial "she's a Black girl" and the stereotypical issues regarding Blacks (even if they never met/knew any but based on stereotyping) was at the forefront of their thinking and once they started communicating/got to know her, then things began to flourish.

People running/hiding from themselves; feeling shame because your hue is colored trying to supress because you feel it's a negative, are only fooling/allowing themselves to be isolated with very little support.

Example: Tiger Woods.

Doesn't identify as African American unless it benefits him professionaly.

He's "Calabasian", the one/only Calabasian. He gets in trouble, has no real external/internal support system and mentally he's still lost.

No amount of money/celebrity can fix that.
12:13 PM on 02/01/2012
You are so correct!!
05:02 PM on 02/02/2012
I agree with you. Ethnically I am half-Black and half-Southeast Asian (Indian) and even though most people think I'm Indian or middle-Eastern, I make sure to let people know that I am Black. Why? Because I AM Black and I am not ashamed. I don't shun my SE Asian heritage at all. But at the end of the day the 'one drop' rule still exists and unlike a lot of 'mixed' folks, I'm okay with that because I don't see Black as being 'bad'. That, in my opinion, is why so many biracial (half-Black) people go out of there way to 'breakdown' all their 'mixtures'. Guess what? I REALLY DO have Indian in my family! LOL! And so what? I'm Black.

www.cafepress.com/certifiedapprovedtees
08:09 AM on 02/01/2012
This appears to be a form of denial to be black. Somehow checking any box other than (Black of african decent) seems to make people feel better about themselves, In truth, the majority of "Blacks" in this country are multi-racial. How do you think we evolved to all the different hues, types of hair, etc. But as time as passed, we have deveolped the desire to be catagorized as something else. Of course, that won't make other people see us as anything other than black.. It dosen't matter whether the slave ship stopped at at Latin, European Country or came on to America, If black is in your blood backgound, DUH.................Guess What
08:38 AM on 02/01/2012
I agree. All this racial identity confusion is nothing but an excuse in order to keep from being seen as black. But in reality you can run from it all you like, it is how the world see you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cozumelcuz
09:32 AM on 02/01/2012
Above, that's all bullshit...you are always starting something! It is simple math, that's all. BUT in every day life.... I judge people by their attitude and their behavior, not the color of their skin.
12:43 PM on 02/01/2012
That's not true! I know somebody that's blacker than the ace of spades and his mother is Asian, and his father is Black. So, since his skin its dark he has no right to acknowledge his Asian blood?! Ya''l are just Afrocentric!
11:12 PM on 02/02/2012
Proves how ignorant you are. Many of us who identify as Mixed race, checked the Black box among others on our census forms. I will always check Black where applicable, along with my other racial backgrounds, and just because I do that doesn't mean I am in denial. Why don't you talk about things you know? You are just like the White man. White people are afraid of becoming a minority (which they already are) and losing their "power", (which is why they hate the President) and Black people are intimidated because they feel multiracial persons will somehow decrease the number of Black identified persons causing high profile figures such as Barack Obama and Halle Berry to be identified as Biracial instead of Black. How we identify doesn't affect your life personally one way or another, so why don't you mind your business?
07:06 AM on 02/01/2012
Classification of race on government forms should be illegal. Until we all start identifying as Americans, we're going nowhere.
Norm
Read think read analyze read comment
07:25 AM on 02/01/2012
I agree. I have been writing "mutt" for a great number of years for exactly that reason.
08:54 AM on 02/01/2012
I wouldn't lower my standards to that level, because the world see you as being either or.
11:36 AM on 02/01/2012
Thanks Norm. I agree with you to some extent. What is wrong with Tiger Woods and any other hman beIng thinking of themselves differently from the labels assigned to them by people who have no vested intrest in their individual lives except to mark them as not belonging. When I see a white woman with blonde hair saying she is black, I think to myself that she must know something about her own heritage that is not visable to me, or a black man who has a white father who says he is white, or a black woman who looks black but identifies with her white mother. We are all racist to some degree, because if those same people used religion to identify with their parent's faith, we would not turn a head to a black man identifying himself as Catholic like his white father. We teach our kids to have self esteem, and then we judge them for not selecting the box that makes us comfortable because we assigned it to them. A child has the right to identify with which his or her parent.
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freedom1947
San Juan River Fishin'
11:01 AM on 02/01/2012
But, Americans won't know who to hate and despise next week.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:48 AM on 02/01/2012
I just put Other
which mean to me that I have other things in life to worry about.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
QUATYL
06:34 AM on 02/01/2012
You're black then.
08:56 AM on 02/01/2012
lol, you got that correct. People will do almost anything to seek white acceptance!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ebusafrica
Pet hate? haters
03:13 AM on 02/01/2012
Awwwww! My brain can't keep up! Heeelp!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Le Nwwaert
10:55 PM on 01/31/2012
Shouldn't black African American Negroes be creating a new name right now,it seems like every 15-20 years they want to be called something different ..Black,Colored,Negro,Afro-American,African-American
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jmoser1973
It is what it is.
01:43 AM on 02/01/2012
Maybe they should, but it would still be way slower than how fast white folks, who still think they are better then them, come up with their own new names for blacks.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
QUATYL
06:40 AM on 02/01/2012
I'm glad it bothers you so. Try worrying about your own life. This must be driving you crazy. lol!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hjo4
Don't make your problems mine
10:55 PM on 01/31/2012
They don't wish to be associated with or considered to be Black and we all know it.It's disgusting to know when folks are beating about the bush and this is one of the occasions. But when things get rough for those who deny and hate being Black, who do they look to for support, the same Black people they hate.And many Black folks fall for it, IMO if you hate American Blacks then don't look to use when in time of need. Meanwhile in their ignorance they are short changing themselves with less representation and Federal dollars that are doled out based on Census figures. Hatred and ignorance always cost those who are hating the most.
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RobietheCat
Totalitarianism is the work of VERY small minds
04:56 AM on 02/01/2012
Race is not the same issue it was in 1960.

We need to move beyond it. The US lives in a very competitive world, and we need to function in a united way.

Today we lack that, and I personally believe that unfettered immigration over the past 30 years by people who were totally unprepared to accept the US laws and customs, has resulted in a quite different country than I remember.

After the LA Riots in 1993 it became very apparent to me that my lot was with my neighbors, my fellow Americans of all colors and creeds. That is our heritage.

I also knew that I could not directly affect the internal policies of countries like China or Mexico, therefore, I needed to work with US Citizens to make a better country or lose it.

I still subscribe to that belief.

But what we have now is our Govt's support of the nationalist objectives of a foreign state, Mexico.

This is treasonous. And like Fast and Furious, amateurish.

And if a person has entered the country illegally, my sympathies, but as US Citizens and Legal Residents, we need to start taking care of our own. Particularly the returning US Vets.

It is NOT a color issue, but an issue of law.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hjo4
Don't make your problems mine
08:18 AM on 02/01/2012
Race is not the same issue it was in 1960.

For who not that much has changed for American Blacks and Native Americans, so please explain your statement.

We need to move beyond it

How can you move beyond something that was NEVER ADDRESSED. That I wish to hear. The American government and those who consistently elected them into office has never been held accountable for the centuries 1867-1964 of legalized racism that still effects American Black citizens in one way or another.

This is not about illegal aliens or illegal immigration which I am completley against. You began down one path then changed course with your response.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
06:42 PM on 02/02/2012
Oh pluease. gtfo.
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TurnToTheLeft
We have nothing to lose but our chains.
09:49 PM on 01/31/2012
Provocative article. I checked other and wrote in hispanic and jewish. I always feel other than white. I am treated hispanic by my last name; get phone calls from companies who want to do business with spanish speaker though my mother tongue is english. I fair enough and olive toned enough to be made to feel other than white from whites. My Jewish blood which courses through veins from my mother remembers what happened to relatives in Germany and Eastern Europe before/during WWII. So, neither 1/2 of me feels honest checking the "white" box; considering what whites have done to my people of origin. So, until they put a muti-racial box with room for qualifiers; I am the "other."
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
12:14 AM on 02/01/2012
just a thought..."not fighting back is tantamount to being a doormat"
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RobietheCat
Totalitarianism is the work of VERY small minds
04:58 AM on 02/01/2012
All of the boxes are irrelevant.

We are all people.

Pete Seeger needs to write one more song about it.

Pete?
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
06:43 PM on 02/02/2012
Dead.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
09:47 PM on 01/31/2012
Black Man
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
12:15 AM on 02/01/2012
good for you...anything else?
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PoliticalRockChick
Sick of the bible & hypocrites
09:27 PM on 01/31/2012
I'm Black Haitian Canadian. Not all black people are African Americans and not all African Americans are black people. Take Charlize Theron, she's African American who's white. That's the true technical term really. I swear whoever came up with these terminologies for people of black skin was not too bright.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
09:45 PM on 01/31/2012
I guess African American makes as much sense as Haitian Canadian.
09:03 AM on 02/01/2012
don't fool yourself, she is white.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
QUATYL
06:44 AM on 02/01/2012
Just worry about yours and not everybody else's