Authors
Joshua R Goldstein, Ann J Morning
Publication date
2000/5/23
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
97
Issue
11
Pages
6230-6235
Publisher
The National Academy of Sciences
Description
This paper presents national estimates of the population likely to identify with more than one race in the 2000 census as a result of a new federal policy allowing multiple racial identification. A large number of race-based public policies—including affirmative action and the redistricting provisions of the Voting Rights Act—may be affected by the shift of some 8–18 million people out of traditional single-race statistical groups. The declines in single-race populations resulting from the new classification procedure are likely to be greater in magnitude than the net undercount in the U.S. census at the center of the controversy over using census sampling. Based on ancestry data in the 1990 census and experimental survey results from the 1995 Current Population Survey, we estimate that 3.1–6.6% of the U.S. population is likely to mark multiple races. Our results are substantially higher than those suggested by previous …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JR Goldstein, AJ Morning - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2000