Dictionary Definition
multiracial adj : made up of or involving or
acting on behalf of various races; "a multiracial society";
"multiracial government"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Extensive Definition
The terms multiracial and mixed-race describe
people whose parents are not the same
race, or the descendants of such mixed people.
Multiracial also describes a society or group that is
composed of people from more than one racial or ethnic group.
What makes a person multiracial?
- See also Admixture
According to Michael
Levin, most people can be clearly identified as belonging to
one race or another, meaning that most people can trace at least
75% of their ancestors to the same geographic region associated
with a major racial group. However Levin insists that anyone with
fewer than 75% of their ancestors originating from the same broad
geographic region should be considered multiracial: Hybrid
populations with multiple lines of descent are to be characterized
in just those terms: as of multiple descent. Thus, American
Negroids are individuals most of whose ancestors from 15 to 5000
generations ago were sub- Saharan African. Specifying 'most' more
precisely in a way that captures ordinary usage may not be
possible. '> 50%' seems too low a threshold; my sense is that
ordinary attributions of race begin to stabilize at 75%. An
individual, half of whose ancestors are East Asian and half
Caucasian, is to be categorized as just that, of half northeast
Asian and half Caucasian ancestry. Nothing in continental
cladistics precludes mixed ancestry, any more than the concept of a
breed of dog excludes mixtures.
Meanwhile the company DNAPrint
Genomics analyzes DNA to determine the exact percentage of
Indo-European, sub-Saharan, East Asian, and Native American
heritage someone has and assigns the to the categories White,
Black, East Asian, Native American, or mixed race accordingly.
According to U.S. sociologist Troy Duster
and ethicist Pilar Ossorio: Some percentage of people who look
white will possess genetic markers indicating that a significant
majority of their recent ancestors were African. Some percentage of
people who look black will possess genetic markers indicating the
majority of their recent ancestors were European.
Words for this concept, including from other languages, used in English
In the English-speaking world many terms for people of various multiracial descents exist, some of which are pejorative or are no longer used. Mulato and mestizo are used in Spanish and métis in French for people of multiracial descent, and these terms are also in certain contexts used in the English-speaking world. In Canada, the Métis are a people of mixed white and First Nation descent. Terms like "mulatto" for people of partly African descent and "mestizo" for people of partly Native American descent are still used in English, but mostly when referring to the past or to the demography of Latin-America. "Half-breed" is a now old-fashioned and pejorative term used for people of partial Native American ancestry. Mestee, once widely used, is now used mostly for members of old mixed-race groups, such as Melungeons, Redbones, Brass Ankles and Mayles.In English, the terms "miscegenation and
"amalgamation"
have been used for "race-mixing", but these terms are now often
considered offensive and are becoming obsolete.
Place in society
Societal acceptance of interracial marriages and the children born from interracial relationships varies widely from person to person and region to region, and over time. In Nazi Germany, harsh race laws were enacted to establish racial purity, although Nazi soldiers in Scandinavia (a few countries considered by the Nazis to have a mostly "Nordic" population) interbred with local women. Scandinavians and Anglo-Saxons were considered to be equal to Germans in the Nazi worldview. In the United States, especially the South, marriage between African Americans and European Americans has historically been looked down upon and legislated against through anti-miscegenation laws. These state laws were declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1967 in Loving v. Virginia. As recently as 2003, Taylor County High School in Taylor County, Georgia has held separate prom celebrations for black and white students; however, some similar phenomena occur equally because of cultural differences and not specific prohibitions on marriage or dating. However, recent data suggests that multiracial marriages are becoming increasingly common in the United States, including the South.Censuses notwithstanding, any count of numbers of
mixed-race people is subject to dispute. People may identify
themselves as members of one single racial category despite having
(potentially many) ancestors belonging to other categories, for
various reasons. For instance, genetic studies of
Afro-Caribbean people show an ancestry that is on average 10%
European and 90% African. Also, a considerable portion of the U.S.
population identified as Black actually have some
Native American or European
American ancestry. Some of these categorization phenomena occur
due to current or past cultural stereotyping or segregation.
Multiracial individuals are often stereotypically presumed to
have struggles with
identity crises, perhaps due to having a sense of identity that
is very different than people who claim to be of just one race.
Most multiracial people cannot or do not identify with just one
group.
Latin America
Mestizo is the common word used to describe multiracial people in Latin America, especially people with and Amerindian and Spanish or other European ancestry. Mestizos make up a large portion of Latin Americans including a majority in some countries.In Latin America, racial mixture was officially
acknowledged from colonial times, resulting in an official
nomenclature for every conceivable mixture present in the various
countries. Initially, this classification was used as a type of
caste system, where rights and privileges were accorded depending
on one's official racial classification. Official caste
distinctions were abolished in many countries of the Spanish-speaking
Americas
as they became independent of Spain, but several
have remained in common usage to this day.
Race and racial mixture have played a significant
role in the politics of many Latin American countries. In some
countries, notably Mexico, Puerto Rico,
Dominican
Republic, Colombia, Panama, Belize, and other
Latin countries, a majority of the population can be described as
biracial or multiracial (depending on the country).
The Mexican philosopher and educator José
Vasconcelos authored an essay on the subject, La
Raza Cósmica, celebrating racial mixture. Venezuelan
president Hugo
Chávez, who is himself of Spanish, indigenous and African
ancestry, has made positive references to the mixed race ancestry
of most Latin Americans from time to time.
Brazil
According to the 2000 official census, 38.5% of Brazilians identified themselves as pardo skin color. That option is normally marked by people that consider themselves multiracial (mestiço). The term pardo is formally used in the official census, but is not used by the population. In Brazilian society, most people that are multiracial call themselves moreno, light-moreno or dark-moreno. These terms are not considered offensive, and focus more on skin color than on ethnicity (it is considered more like the others human characteristics such as being tall or short).The most common multiracial groups are between
African and European (mulato), and Amerindian and
European (caboclo or
mameluco). But there are also African and Amerindian (cafuzo), and
East-Asian (mostly Japanese) and European (ainocô). All groups are
more or less found throughout the whole country. Most of the
Brazilian multiracials, however, have three origins: Amerindian,
European and African.
Since multiracial relations in Brazilian society
have occurred for many generations, today, some people find it
difficult to trace their own ethnic ancestry, and there is a high
level of integration between all groups. However, there is a great
social and economic difference between European descendants (found
more among the upper and middle classes) and African, Amerindian
and multiracial descendants (found more among the middle and lower
classes).
South Africa
Multiracial South Africans are commonly referred to as coloureds. According to the 2001 South African Census, they are the second largest miniority (8.9%) after white South Africans (9.2%).Malaysia and Singapore
Malaya's population comprises many ethnic groups, with the Malays making up the majority, close to 60% of the population. By constitutional definition, Malays are Muslim who practice Malay norms and culture. Therefore, technically, a Muslim of any race who practices Malay norms and culture can be considered a Malay and have equal rights when it comes to Malay rights as stated in the constitution. About 25% of the population are Malaysians of Chinese descent. Malaysians of Indian descent comprise about 8% of the population. About 90% of the Indian community are Tamils but various other groups are also present, including Malayalis, Punjabis and Gujaratis. There are also various non-Malay peoples who are designated as indigenous, mostly in East Malaysia. These make up about 7% of the population.[citation needed]Non-Malay indigenous groups make up more than
half of the state of Sarawak's population, constitute about 66% of
Sabah's population, and also exist in much smaller numbers on the
Peninsula, where they are collectively known as Orang Asli. The
non-Malay indigenous population is divided into dozens of ethnic
groups, but they share some general cultural similarities. Other
Malaysians also include those of, inter alia, European,
Middle
Eastern, Cambodian,
Thai and
Vietnamese
descent. Europeans and Eurasians include British who colonized and
settled in Malaysia and some Portuguese. Most of the Middle
Easterners are Arab descent. A small number of Cambodians and
Vietnamese settled in Malaysia as Vietnam War
refugees.
Population distribution is uneven, with some 20
million residents concentrated on the Malay Peninsula, while East
Malaysia is relatively less populated.
Due to the rise in labour intensive industries,
Malaysia has 10 to 20% foreign workers with the uncertainty due in
part to the large number of illegal workers, mostly Indonesians.
There are a million legal foreign workers and perhaps another
million unauthorized foreigners. The state of Sabah alone has
nearly 25% of its 2.7 million population listed as illegal foreign
workers in the last census. However, this figure of 25% is thought
to be less than half the figure speculated by NGOs. Interracial
partnerships are also on a steady rise in Malaysia, most notably in
the cities, eg. Kuala
Lumpur.
According to government statistics, the
population of Singapore as of September 2007 was 4.68 million, of
whom 3.7 million were Singaporean citizens and permanent residents
(termed 'Singapore Residents').[57] Chinese formed 75.2% of
'Singapore Residents', Malays 13.6%, Indians 8.8%, while Eurasians
and other groups formed 2.4%.
In 2006. the crude birth rate stood at 10.1 per
1000, a very low level attributed to birth control policies, and
the crude death rate was also one of the lowest in the world at 4.3
per 1000. The total population growth was 4.4% with Singapore
residents growth at 1.8%. The higher percentage growth rate is
largely from net immigration, but also increasing life expectancy.
Singapore is the second-most densely populated independent country
in the world after Monaco, excluding
Macau and
Hong
Kong, which are special administrative regions of the People's
Republic of China. In 1957, Singapore's population was
approximately 1.45 million, and there was a relatively high birth
rate. Aware of the country's extremely limited natural resources
and small territory, the government introduced birth control
policies in the late 1960s. In the late 1990s, the population was
ageing, with fewer people entering the labour market and a shortage
of skilled workers. In a dramatic reversal of policy, the Singapore
government introduce a "baby bonus" scheme in 2001 (enhanced in
August 2004) that encouraged couples to have more
children.[58]
In 2006, the total fertility
rate was only 1.26 children per woman, the 3rd lowest in the
world and well below the 2.10 needed to replace the population.
[59] In 2006, 38,317 babies were born, compared to around 37,600 in
2005. This number, however, is not sufficient to maintain the
population growth. To overcome this problem, the government is
encouraging foreigners to immigrate to Singapore. These large
numbers of immigrants have kept Singapore's population from
declining.
The Philippines
There has been Chinese presence in the
Philippines since the ninth century; although large scale
migrations of Chinese to the Philippines only started during the
Spanish colonial era, when the world market was opened to the
Philippines. It is estimated that among Filipinos, 10% have some
Chinese ancestry and 2% are “full-blooded” Chinese.
According to a genetic study which included 28
genotyped individuals from the Philippines, 3.6% of the population
is of European descent A large part of this European introgression
is very likely of Spanish origin. Filipinos with a
mix of Spanish ancestry, Spanish
mestizos, are particularly visible in show business, and some
leaders in Philippine business and commerce are of Spanish
descent.
India
India has more than two thousand ethnic groups,
and every major religion is represented, as are four major families
of languages (Indo-European,
Dravidian
and Tibeto-Burman
languages) as well as a language isolate (the Nihali language
spoken in parts of Maharashtra). Further complexity is lent by the
great variation that occurs across this population on social
parameters such as income and education.
United Kingdom
In 2000, The
Sunday Times reported that "Britain has the highest
rate of interracial
relationships in the world". Census data shows the population
of England
(as a sub-section of the UK) to be
1.4% mixed-race (2001), compared with, for example, 1.4% in the
U.S. and therefore are the same (2002 estimates; see below).
However, the U.S. figure largely does not include mixed-race people
who have a black parent. Also, as most of the English population is
of one race (white) — more so than in the US — there are fewer
opportunities for interracial relationships in England. In support
of the report's conclusions, it can be calculated that 14.4% of
English residents not identified as white are mixed-race, compared
with 7.5% in the U.S.
In England many multi-racial people are from the
British
Caribbean. Some, like Formula One driver, Lewis
Hamilton are referred to or describe themselves as 'black', but
the majority of mixed race Britons identify themselves as 'mixed
race' as indicated by the 2001 census. Many people are partly
Welsh or
partly Italian or
partly of Irish
Descent but such people cannot be described as 'mixed race' as
they come from the same racial background (i.e.: Caucasian). The
correct term for such people is 'mixed ethnicity', not 'mixed
race'. The 2001 UK
Census included a section entitled Mixed to which 1.4% (1.6% by
2005 estimates) of people responded, which was split further into
White and Black Caribbean, White and Black African and Other
Mixed.
Cities/ Regions with notable Multiracial/ Mixed
Race populations
- West Midlands - 5.50%
- Nottingham - 3.70%
- Manchester - 3.23%
- London -
3.15%
- Lambeth - 4.83%
- Slough - 3.00%
- Birmingham - 2.90%
- Wolverhampton - 2.70%
- Luton - 2.56%
- Leicester - 2.30%
- Coventry - 2.20%
- Liverpool - 2.20%
- Bristol - 2.08%
- Derby - 2.00%
- Cardiff - 1.99%
- Leeds - 1.80%
- Sheffield - 1.60%
- Southampton - 1.50%
- City of Bradford - 1.40%
Canada
Multiracial Canadians, in 2006 totalled 1.5% of the population, up from 1.2% in 2001. The mixed race population grew by 25% since the previous census. Of this, the most popular combinations were multiple visible minorities (for example, both black and South Asian), followed closely by white-black, white-Latin American, white-Chinese and many other smaller mixes.Another 1.2% of Canadians are Metis (descendants
of a historical population who were partially Aboriginal and
European,
particularly French,
Scottish,
and Irish ethnic
groups. see also Métis
people (Canada)
This brings a total mixed population of up to 3%,
greater than that of the United
Kingdom, and the United
States, in terms of percentage.
United States
The proportion of multiracial children in the
United States is growing. Interracial partnerships are on the rise,
as are transracial adoptions. In 1990, about 14% of 18- to
19-year-olds, 12% of 20- to 21-year-olds and 7% of 34- to
35-year-olds were involved in interracial relationships (Joyner and
Kao, 2005). Given the variety of the familial and more general
social environments in which multiracial children are raised, along
with the diversity of their appearance (vis-a-vis their component
races and their family members), it can be difficult to make
generalizations about multiracial children's challenges or
opportunities. The racial social
identity of children and that of their parents in the same
multiracial family may vary or be the same. Some multiracial
children feel pressure from various sources to "choose" or to
assimilate into a single racial identity, while others whose
identity or lifestyle is perceived to be closer to some of their
component races than others may feel pressure not to abandon one or
more of their ethnicities. Still other children grow up without
race being a significant issue in their lives.
Categorization and censuses
Some multiracial individuals feel marginalized by U.S. society. For example, when applying to schools or for a job, or when taking standardized tests, Americans are sometimes asked to check boxes corresponding to race or ethnicity. Typically, about five race choices are given with the instruction to "check only one." Many other such surveys include an additional "other" box, but this unfortunately groups together individuals of many different multiracial types (ex: European Americans/African-Americans are grouped with Asian/Native American Indians).There remain many circumstances in which biracial
individuals are left with no real response when asked for
demographic data. But multiracial people won a victory of sorts
after years of effort when in 1997, the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) changed the federal
regulation of racial categories to permit multiple responses,
resulting in a new format for the 2000 United
States Census, which allowed participants to select more than
one of the six available categories, which were, in brief:
"White,"
"Black or
African American," "Asian,"
"American
Indian or Alaskan Native," "Native
Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander," and "Other." Further
details are given in the article: Race (US
Census). The OMB made its directive mandatory for all
government forms by 2003.
In contrast, the
United Kingdom Census 2001 offered specific mixed-race
categories: "Mixed White and Black
Caribbean", "Mixed White and Black
African", "Mixed White and (South)
Asian", and "Other Mixed", as well as "Other ethnic
group".
Formal recognition of legitimacy
In the past, laws based on racial classifications restricted the free choice of a marriage partner of the other sex in the United States, in Nazi Germany and in South Africa under Apartheid. Such laws were enforced in many individual states of the United States until 1967, in Nazi Germany from 1935 until 1945, and in South Africa under Apartheid from 1948 until it was repealed in 1985. Such laws targeted marriages between whites and people of other races. In 1935, Nazi Germany enacted a law that was part of the Nuremberg Laws which prohibited marriage between Germans and Jews, which were classified as a separate race, as well as Gypsies and blacks.. In South Africa, the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act prohibited marriage between whites and non-whites (which were classified as Black, Asian and Coloured).In the United States, the various state laws were
known as anti-miscegenation
laws. Such laws in all states applied to marriages between
"Caucasians"
and African
Americans ("negroes" and/or "mulattoes"), and in some states
also to marriages between white Americans and Asian
Americans and/or
American Indians.
By the 1920s, the various Asian groups that had
arrived in the United States were all judged to American courts to
be non-white. In several states, Asian Americans were prohibited
from marrying whites. In anti-miscegenation laws of several states,
Chinese
Americans and Japanese
Americans were classified as members of the "Mongoloid
race", Filipino
Americans as members of the "Malay race"
and Indian
Americans were classified as
"Hindus" or "Hindoos".
Hispanic
Americans of partial African and/or Native American descent
were in certain states in theory legally forbidden to marry whites,
but often they were regarded to be white. On the other hand, the
state of California took no legal steps against marriages between
Mexican
Americans and Punjabi
immigrants, although it prohibited the Punjabis from marrying white
Americans.
In 1947, the Mexican
American Andrea Perez and African
American Sylvester Davis were refused a marriage licence
because their marriage would have violated California's
anti-miscegenation
laws, which prohibited marriage between whites and non-whites.
Perez was judged to be white. However, in a landmark decision the
California
Supreme Court in Perez v.
Sharp (1948) repealed California's anti-miscegenation laws
because they ran counter to the
Constitution of the United States.
In 1967, the
United States Supreme Court ruled in Loving
v. Virginia that all remaining anti-miscegenation laws were
unconstitutional, after years of legal challenges by plaintiffs and
civil rights organisations, and since then such laws have had no
legal force. In 2000, Alabama was the last state to officially
remove its unenforceable anti-miscegenation laws from its state
statute.
Types of mixed-race people
Africa-origin
American-origin
Asian-origin
European-origin
- Afrikaners or Boers 'South Africa'
- Black Dutch (non-African diasporic)
- Black people in Ireland
- British Mixed
- Castizo
- Canarian people
- Coloured Southern Africa
- Eurasians
- Isleños
- Réunion Creoles
See also
- Amalgamation
- Berber People
- Black Irish (Non African-Diasporic)
- Cherokee Freedmen Controversy
- Ethnicity
- Fernandinos
- Interracial Marriage
- Lipka Tatars
- Melting pot
- Métis
- Métis people (Canada)
- Mestizo
- Moors
- Miscegenation
- Mixed Race Day
- Mulatto
- Multiethnic
- One-drop rule
- Origins of Tutsi and Hutu
- Passing
- Plaçage
- Pre-Columbian theories I
- Pre-Columbian theories II
- Ancient Egyptians
- Race Traitor
- Siddhi (some are mixed race)
- Romani people
- Social Race
- Sub-Saharan DNA in Europe
- William Loren Katz
References
- MULTIRACIAL CHILDREN
- Joyner, Kara and Grace Kao. 2005. "Interracial Relationships and the Transition to Adulthood." American Sociological Review 70(4):563-582.
- Freyre, Gilberto. "The masters and the slaves: a study in the development of Brazilian civilization". Translated by Samuel Putnam. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1946.
External links
- The Association of MultiEthnic Americans, Inc., founded 1988
- Multiethnic Education Program offering resources and strategies (including videos, publications & trainings) to support mixed race children in educational settings.
- MAVIN Foundation, an organization advocating for mixed heritage people and families
- MOSAIC UK, a UK-based organisation for mixed race families
- The Multiracial Activist: an online activist publication registered with the Library of Congress, focused on multiracial individuals and interracial families since 1997
- Brazilian Multiracial Movement, the first Brazilian mixed-race organization, founded in 2001
- ProjectRACE, an organization leading the movement for a multiracial classification
- People in Harmony UK, founded in 1972
- Notable Multiracial People
multiracial in Korean: 혼혈
multiracial in Japanese: 混血
multiracial in Polish: Wielorasowi
multiracial in Portuguese: Multi-racial
multiracial in Swedish: Chino
multiracial in Chinese: 混血兒
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
amalgamated, ambiguous, ambivalent, amphibious, blended, combined, complex, composite, compound, compounded, conglomerate, dappled, eclectic, equivocal, fifty-fifty,
half-and-half, heterogeneous, indiscriminate, intricate, ironic, jumbled, many-sided, medley, mingled, miscellaneous, mixed, motley, multifaceted, multinational, patchy, pluralistic, promiscuous, scrambled, syncretic, thrown together,
varied