Americans are racially classified literally from the cradle to the grave. Their race is recorded on their birth certificate, when they enroll in school, when they apply for a passport, when they apply for jobs, for mortgages, for university admittance, when they take part in medical experiments, when they are arrested for a crime, when they receive treatment at the hospital, and when they die. This is such a taken for granted part of everyday life that it becomes routine for most individuals, and sometimes it is done without the person being classified even knowing it is happening or being consulted. Thus a mother and father are asked their race and the race of their baby when a birth certificate is created at a hospital. But death certific...
The first national census was conducted in 1790, and has been repeated at ten year intervals ever si...
Race is an unscientific, societally constructed taxonomy that is based on an ideology that views som...
Thanks to the progress made by modern genomics, human populations and individuals can be finely char...
In the first census of 1790, the Census formally counted Free White Males, Free White Females, All O...
This Article is concerned with the constitutive power of the census with respect to race. It is an e...
TO MODERN EYES, especially American ones, the reality of race is self-evident. Peoples whose ancesto...
On the U.S. census form American citizens told they may list any ethnic ancestries with which they i...
This article addresses the question of how the United States' policies of antidiscrimination drew on...
This study examines the embedded nature of whiteness in the use of racial and ethnic categories on U...
Educational disparities are frequently framed in racial comparisons that are based on data generated...
THE 2000 CENSUS WILL MARK a dramatic change in the way that “race” is officially enumerated in the ...
In 1898 the U.S. Bureau of Immigration initiated a classification of immigrants into some 40 categor...
International audienceCurrent census debates in Brazil surrounding Brazilian race categories center ...
The “color line” is not fixed but ripples through time, finding expression at distinct stages of our...
This thesis compares the political development of racial categories employed by the United States, C...
The first national census was conducted in 1790, and has been repeated at ten year intervals ever si...
Race is an unscientific, societally constructed taxonomy that is based on an ideology that views som...
Thanks to the progress made by modern genomics, human populations and individuals can be finely char...
In the first census of 1790, the Census formally counted Free White Males, Free White Females, All O...
This Article is concerned with the constitutive power of the census with respect to race. It is an e...
TO MODERN EYES, especially American ones, the reality of race is self-evident. Peoples whose ancesto...
On the U.S. census form American citizens told they may list any ethnic ancestries with which they i...
This article addresses the question of how the United States' policies of antidiscrimination drew on...
This study examines the embedded nature of whiteness in the use of racial and ethnic categories on U...
Educational disparities are frequently framed in racial comparisons that are based on data generated...
THE 2000 CENSUS WILL MARK a dramatic change in the way that “race” is officially enumerated in the ...
In 1898 the U.S. Bureau of Immigration initiated a classification of immigrants into some 40 categor...
International audienceCurrent census debates in Brazil surrounding Brazilian race categories center ...
The “color line” is not fixed but ripples through time, finding expression at distinct stages of our...
This thesis compares the political development of racial categories employed by the United States, C...
The first national census was conducted in 1790, and has been repeated at ten year intervals ever si...
Race is an unscientific, societally constructed taxonomy that is based on an ideology that views som...
Thanks to the progress made by modern genomics, human populations and individuals can be finely char...