N. Keita Christophe, Annabelle L. Atkin, Gabriela L. Stein, Richard M. Lee
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引用次数: 0
摘要
社会科学家经常依靠单一项目来评估参与者的种族,但这种常见做法可能会误导人,掩盖样本中多种族参与者的数量。本研究报告了来自 688 名多元化多种族大学生(年龄 = 21 岁,范围 = 18-57,73.1% 为女性)的多站点样本的描述性统计数据,以说明不同的种族人口学信息收集方式会如何影响研究人员对样本中多种族参与者的理解和分类。总体而言,与参与者亲生父母的种族相比,我们样本中 41.7% 的参与者会被以不同的方式分类(单种族 vs. 双种族 vs. 多种族)。我们还发现,根据多种族身份的不同方面和一些社会人口学因素,多种族个体中被识别为不同种族的比例(例如,被归入单种族类别与被归入多种族类别)也有所不同。使用自我报告的种族和父母种族,对研究人员如何在样本中对多种族参与者进行分类 和识别具有重大影响。
How Collection of Racial Demographics Highlights or Hides Participants’ Multiraciality: An Illustrative Example and Warning for Social Scientists
Social scientists frequently rely on a single item to assess a participant's race, but this common practice can be misleading by obscuring the number of Multiracial participants in one’s sample. The current study reports descriptive statistics data from a multi-site sample of 688 diverse Multiracial college students (Mage = 21, range = 18–57, 73.1% female) to illustrate how different ways of collecting demographic information on race can shape researchers’ understanding and classification of Multiracial participants in their samples. Overall, 41.7% of participants in our sample would be classified differently (monoracial vs. Biracial vs. Multiracial) using participant-reported race compared to the race(s) of participants’ biological parents. We also find the proportion of Multiracial individuals that would be identified differently (e.g., put into a monoracial category vs. classified as Multiracial) differs based on various facets of Multiracial identity and several sociodemographic factors. Using self-reported versus parental race has substantial implications for how researchers classify and identify Multiracial participants in their samples.
期刊介绍:
Race and Social Problems (RASP) provides a multidisciplinary forum for the publication of articles and discussion of issues germane to race and its enduring relationship to socioeconomic, psychological, political, and cultural problems. The journal publishes original empirical studies, reviews of past research, theoretical studies, and invited essays that advance the understanding of the complexities of race and its relationship to social problems. Submissions from the fields of social work, anthropology, communications, criminology, economics, history, law, political science, psychology, public health, and sociology are welcome.