
BY: TIM HENDERSON
The U.S. Census Bureau and a growing number of states are starting to gather more detailed information about Americansâ race and ethnicity, a change some advocates of the process say will allow people to choose identities that more closely reflect how they see themselves.
Crunching and sorting through those specific details â known as data disaggregation â will help illuminate disparities in areas such as housing and health outcomes that could be hidden within large racial and ethnic categories. But some experts say the details also might make it harder for Black people from multiracial countries to identify themselves.
Racial data gleaned from the census is important because local, state, tribal and federal governments use it to guide certain civil rights policies and âin planning and funding government programs that provide funds or services for specific groups,â according to the Census Bureau.
The form will have checkboxes for main categories â current census groupings include âAsian,â âBlack,â âAfrican Americanâ and âWhite,â among others â followed by more specific checkboxes. Under Asian, for example, might be Chinese, Asian Indian, Filipino, Vietnamese, Korean or Japanese. And then there will be an empty box for people to write in more specific subgroups.
Collecting more detail by allowing free-form answers, for example, will make it possible for people to identify themselves as part of more racial and ethnic subgroups â such as âSardinianâ (an autonomous region within Italy) instead of simply âItalianâ â and include alternative names for certain groups, such as writing âSchitsuâumsh,â the ancient language for âCoeur DâAlene Tribe.â
And the Census Bureau will for the first time include Middle Eastern/North African as a separate racial/ethnic category for respondents with that heritage. Until now, Middle Eastern people who did not choose a race were treated as a subcategory under âwhite,â based on a 1944 court ruling intended to protect Arab immigrants from racist laws banning U.S. citizenship for nonwhite immigrants.
Under new federal guidelines approved in March, the bureau also will give people the option to check no race at all if they identify as Hispanic or Middle Eastern/North African.
The Census Bureau already has decided to use more open-ended questions in both the 2027 American Community Survey and the nationâs 2030 census. But the agency is seeking public comment on the way write-in responses will be categorized.
The bureau wants to hear how people are likely to identify themselves, said Merarys RĂos-Vargas, chief of the bureauâs Ethnicity and Ancestry Branch, Population Division, in a recent webinar. The agency also is interested in whether there are missing or incorrect entries in its proposed list of possible responses.
âItâs about peopleâs livesâ
Nancy LĂłpez, a University of New Mexico sociology professor, said she and other experts in Black Hispanic culture think the census should have a âvisual raceâ or âstreet raceâ question, so people can communicate how others see them as well as how they identify themselves. The answer might be âBlackâ or a yet-unrecognized racial category such as âbrown.â
âA separate question on race as a visual status helps illuminate the kind of things we are interested in â discrimination in housing, discrimination in employment, discrimination in education and accessing health care in public spaces,â said LĂłpez, who is the daughter of Dominican immigrants and a co-founder of the universityâs Institute for the Study of âRaceâ & Social Justice.
âItâs about peopleâs lives, itâs about the future, itâs about children, itâs about access to opportunities and itâs about fairness,â she added, noting that even if the federal government doesnât add such questions to surveys and the decennial census, state and universities can still do it on their own as they collect data for health care, student enrollment and other topics.
The NALEO Educational Fund, an organization representing Latino elected and appointed officials, supports the decision to make a race choice optional for Hispanics.
âMany Latinos did not see themselves in any of the categories for their racial identity,â said Rosalind Gold, NALEOâs chief public policy officer. âThereâs a large number of Latinos who feel that identifying as Latino is both their racial and ethnic identity.â
Gold said NALEO understands the concern some have that failing to require a race designation will obscure racial information on Black Hispanics. But her group argues that the census can get what it needs by educating the public on how to respond and by including prompts on the questionnaires to guide race choices.
Black Hispanic people often see themselves as having a single racial and ethnic identity, according to several experts in Hispanic identity who spoke at a Census Bureau National Advisory Committee meeting Nov. 7.
âThey conceptualize themselves as belonging to one [group],â said Nicholas Vargas, an associate professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, Berkeley, speaking at the committee meeting.
âThey check âBlackâ and they check âDominicanâ â and donât want to be counted as two or more,â he said.
In response, Rachel Marks, an adviser for the Census Bureau on race and ethnicity, said the bureau will consider that issue and other âfeedback on how people want to be representedâ before making a final decision on survey details.
The bureau may recognize a term, Afro-Latino, that could be used to indicate both Black race and Hispanic ethnicity, according to a proposed code list from the agency, as well as âBlaxicanâ for Black Mexican and âBlasianâ for Black Asian.
The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, a coalition of civil rights groups, called the more detailed questions âa step forwardâ but also suggested more guidance on the forms to ensure people are categorized the way they want to be. In its comment on the changes, the group noted that in 2020, some people who wrote in âBritishâ under the Black checkbox were categorized as partly white even if they didnât mean that.
The group also said it is âconcerned about a conflation of the concepts of race and ethnicity,â and it asked for more research to make sure people understand how to respond.
State actions
Some states are acting on their own to gather more detailed data about identity.
New Jersey is among the latest states to pass a law requiring more detailed race and ethnic data collection for state records such as health data and school enrollment.
A similar bill in Michigan would require state agencies that gather information to offer âmultiracialâ and âMiddle Eastern or North Africanâ as choices; the bill remains in committee.
And advocates in Oregon, which already has a law requiring detailed ethnic data collection, are asking the state for more details on Asian subgroups who face education challenges.
A December 2023 report by The Leadership Conference Education Fund identified 13 other states with laws requiring more detailed state data on ethnic and racial groups, including laws passed last year in Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts and Nevada.
The states of California, Connecticut, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island and Washington already had such laws, the group found.
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