Race, Ethnicity & Families
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Transcript Race, Ethnicity & Families
Race, Ethnicity, & Families
Family Sociology
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
How do we define race?
How do we define ethnicity?
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Racial-Ethnic Groups
Racial groups are those with a common set of
physical features that distinguishes them from
other groups
Race is defined as a category composed of
people who share real or alleged physical traits
that members of a society deem to be socially
significant
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
But race is also a social concept
Race is socially constructed
The characteristics associated with each
racial group are subjective
Definitions of race:
vary over time
from one society to another
have emerged from interaction of various
populations over long periods of human history
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
Why do sociologists argue that
race is socially constructed?
1) While racial characteristics may have
been biological in origin, the
interpretation of those characteristics
varies
Societies each decide which racial
differences are meaningful
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
Why do sociologists argue that race
is socially constructed?
2) Choice of racial characteristics is
subjective
People differ in many ways, but only some of
those differences are emphasized
For example, in defining differences in racial
characteristics, why have we focused on skin
color or the shape of a person’s eyes?
Why isn’t race based on different blood types
or eye color?
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
Why do sociologists argue that race is
socially constructed?
3) The characteristics used to distinguish racial
differences and stereotypes change over time
4) And the last reason to argue that race is socially
constructed is that definitions of race differences
vary from one society to the next
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
How do we define ethnicity?
A population that shares a cultural
heritage
Ethnic Groups have a sense of group
identity based on a distinctive cultural
pattern or heritage
They often share a place of common
ancestry, language, or religion that is the
basis of their collective identity
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
How do we define ethnicity??
Ethnic groups often have a sense of
brotherhood or sisterhood that is maintained
within a larger society.
Members of ethnic groups have usually migrated
to a new nation or have been conquered by an
invading population.
MAKE SURE YOU UNDERSTAND THE
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RACE AND
ETNICITY!
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U.S. Population by Race, 2005
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U.S. Population by Hispanic Origin:
2000 & 2010
Between 2000 and 2010, the Hispanic population grew by 43 percent!!!
The Hispanic population increased by 15.2 million between 2000 and 2010,
Number of Hispanics rose from 35.3 million in 2000 when group made up 13
percent of the total population to
To 50.5 million or 16.3 percent of total population
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
Need to recognize diversity in families
How do families vary by race/ethnicity?
How does family structure vary?
How does the teen pregnancy rate vary
by race/ethnicity
How do families’ ties to other social
institutions, like education system, the
economy, or health care system, vary by
race/ethnicity?
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
Different racial groups make their homes
in different neighborhoods, and have
different access to a different set of social
institutions
Social institutions create paths in which
families are assigned to a different set of
opportunities
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Race, Ethnicity & Families
Minority families are:
more likely to live in disadvantaged
neighborhoods
go to under-funded schools
have less access to high level colleges
have poorer health care options
have higher rates of teen pregnancy
less access to career or higher paying jobs
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Social Institutions
Family sociologists examine interactions among social
institutions and how they influence behaviors, attitudes,
and opportunities in families
All of these interactions take place in the context of
racial/ethnic relations in the U.S.
Economy
Education
Race
Government
Families
Religion
Ethnicity
Healthcare
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Race/Ethnic differences
Great differences among individual and
families outcomes by racial/ethnic
groups
Let’s consider the rate of teen
pregnancy:
Source: http://www.cdc.gov/TeenPregnancy/Massachusetts.htm
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Teen Pregnancy by Race/Ethnicity in
Massachusetts
For example:
In 2006 4,724 mothers age 15-19 gave birth in Massachusetts
This is a birth rate of 21 per 1,000 females in that age group
Significant disparities exist in birth rates for Massachusetts
youth by race and Hispanic origin.
In 2006, the non-Hispanic black teen birth rate was nearly
three times higher than the white teen birth rate
Hispanic teen birth rate was nearly six times higher
In sum your race/ethnicity has an effect on your likelihood
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of having a teen birth
Sociologist Howard Taylor asks…
Why are African-American families different
from other racial-ethnic groups?
Why is the teen pregnancy rate so much
higher for African American women?
Cultural argument – African American
families rely more on extended family ties,
rely less on nuclear family
Economic argument – As we changed from
emphasis on industrial occupations to
service ones – A.A. men were displaced
from their jobs more than white men
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Sociologist Howard Taylor asks:
Why are African-American families
different from other racial-ethnic groups?
Economic argument – African American
men, it is argues, “bring less to the table”
in terms of economic stability – so African
American women are less likely to marry
them
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African-American Families
Union formation - first unions formed are
twice as likely to be cohabitations compared
to whites
Family incomes for black families well below
averages for white families
Median Family income:
African American families is $32,584
White families: $51,861
Economic gains to marriage have declined
for black women
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Hispanic Families
As much variation within the group as between
Hispanics and other groups
Mexican Americans, Cuban Americans, Puerto
Ricans = 31.3 million people
Mexicans and Mexican Americans = 65%
Central and South Americans = 14%
Puerto Rican = 10%
Cuban Americans = 4%
We call these groups Hispanic, but they come
from different countries with different traditions
and beliefs
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Asian-American Families
Again Asian is an “umbrella” term that
includes diverse groups
Less research on Asian-American families
as prior to 1965 numbers were lower than
Hispanics
But for Example, in 1970 there were
69,000 Korean Americans
By 1998 there were 980,000 living in U.S.
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Asian-American Families
In general Asian-Americans emphasize
interdependence among family members
over individualism favored by western
cultures
Asian families place more emphasis on
children’s loyalty and service to parents
Asian-American adults are more likely to
live in a household with an adult child who
provide most of the income
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Summary
Race is socially constructed
We define race by physical characteristics
such as skin color and eye shape in U.S. but
why did we choose those?
Ethnicity refers to your ancestry, language,
religion, or traditions.
Family patterns vary greatly by race/ethnicity
Rates of marriage and fertility rate varies
across racial and ethnic groups
Make sure you know percentages of major
racial/ethnic groups
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