NEW ISSUES: RETHINKING RACE
by Amitai Etzioni
There are strong sociological reasons to argue that the US Census should introduce a new racial category, All-American, into its next count. Others have suggested that this category be named "multi-racial." Inclusion of such a category would allow millions of Americans who are not, and do not see themselves, as members of any one race to be recognized as people with a blended heritage, reflecting the mixed heritage of America itself. While the actual census is still more than two years away, the decision of how Americans may define themselves is going to be made by the Office of Management and Budget and the Department of Commerce later this year. The importance of the decision ranges well beyond changing the check-off boxes on the new Census forms/
In the 1990 Census the government required Americans to
define their race using one of 16 categories. The main groupings are white
and black, which in 1990 accounted for 92% of all Americans. (The remaining
racially defined categories are Native American, Aleut, Eskimo, and ten
variations of Asian or pacific Islanders). And, for the first time, the
Census recognized that a growing number of Americans are of mixed racial
background. For instance, Asian and white Americans intermarry at a high
rate and have children who compose a rapidly growing race of blended Americans.
Since 1990, the number of interracial children has quadrupled - now reaching
the two-million mark. Millions of other Americans are viewed as members
of one race but see themselves as members of another. The 1990 Census allowed
these Americans to select the marginalizing label of "other."
despite the unattractiveness of this characterization, which smacks of
outsider, about 9.8 millions, 4% of the total population, chose this designation
rather than be defined according to the established mono-racial categories.
Enter Politics
The question now is if future censuses should allow people
to select a multi-racial category. Suggestions to include the multiracial
category send some African American leaders ballistic. Abraham k. Sundiata,
chairman of the Afro-American Studies Department of Brandeis, sees here
a drive to undermine black solidarity. he fears that in cities where blacks
now hold majorities, the new category will divide them and undermine their
dominance. All this will happen, he implies, because some African Americans
will somehow be forced into the new multiracial category. He disregards
that people will still be free to check the box of their choice, even if
the new category is added.
Another reason several African American leaders object
to a multi-racial category is that race data is used for the enforcement
of civil rights legislation in employment, voting rights, housing and mortgage
lending, health care services, and educational opportunities. They fear
that the category could decrease the number of blacks in official statistics,
and thus undermine efforts to enforce anti-discrimination statutes and
undercut numerous social programs based on racial quotas.
This fear was rather explicitly stated during a recent
Congressional hearing by Representative Carrie Meek who stated:
"I understand how Tiger Woods and the rest of them
feel. But no matter how they feel from a personal standpoint, we're thinking
about the census and reporting accuracy...The multiracial category would
cloud the count of (the) discrete minorities who are assigned to a lower
track in public schools,...kept out of certain occupations and whose progress
toward seniority or promotion has been skewered...Lastly, Mr. Chairman,
multi-racial categories will reduce the level of political representation
for minorities."
What is Race Anyhow?
One may wonder if the number of Americans involved is
large enough to justify what at first seems like a tempest in a tea pot.
The underlying reason is that one tends to underestimate the number of
Americans who might qualify for the new category because one assumes that
only those of a mixed racial heritage may fall into the All-American box.
Actually there are considerable differences in color and other racial features
with all racial groups, which makes the question of who is in versus out
much more flexible than often seems. For instance, many dark-skinned Hispanics
who do not see themselves as black, and many light-skinned African Americans
who do not wish to pass a white, would be free to choose the new category.
One should also not that those who study race professionally,
especially physical and cultural anthropologists, strongly object to the
concept of racial categorization. The point out that no single gene can
be used to differentiate one race from another; moreover, indicators from
blood types to texture of hair vary a great deal both among and within
groups considered to be of one race. Indeed the American Anthropological
Association passed a resolution stating that "differentiating species
into biologically defined 'race' has proven meaningless and unscientific."
The Merits of a New Category
Dropping the whole social construction of race does not
seem in the cards, even if the most far-reaching arguments against Affirmative
Action and for a "color-blind" society, win the day. However,
there are strong sociological reasons to favor the inclusion of a multi-racial
category in the 2000 Census.
Introducing a nulti-racial category has the potential
to soften racial lines that now divide America by rendering them more like
economic differences and less like caste lines. Sociologists have long
observed that a major reason the United States experiences relatively few
confrontations along class lines is that Americans believe they can move
from one economic status to another. (for instance, workers become foremen,
and foremen become small businessmen, who are considered middle class.)
Moreover, there are not sharp class demarcation lines as there are in Britain;
in America many workers consider themselves middle class, dress up to go
to work, and hide their tools and lunches in briefcases, while middle class
super-liberal professors join labor unions. A major reason confrontations
in America occur more often along racial lines is that color lines currently
seem rigidly unchangeable.
If the new category is allowed, if more and more Americans
will choose this category in future decades, as there is every reason to
expect given the high rate of intermarriage and a desire by millions of
Americans to avoid being racially boxed in, the new Census category may
go along way in determining if America in the next century will be less
caste-like and more class-like, a society in which differences are blurred.
Skeptics may suggest that how one marks a tiny box on
the 200 Census form is between ones' self and the keepers of the statistics.
but, as this sociologist sees it, if the multiracial concept is allowed
into the national statistics, it will also enter the social vocabulary.
It will make the American society less stratified along racial lines, less
rigidly divided, and thus more communitarian.
Beyond the Census
The best indication that changes in the Census may lead
to more encompassing changes in our social categories and thinking is supported
by the fact that these processes already have begun to unfold. In California,
where about future is often previewed, there is already an Association
for Multi-Ethnic Americans, and in several states, legislation has been
introduced to allow the multi-racial category on school forms. Two states,
Georgia and Indiana, have required the multi-racial category to be used
by their government agencies.
(Another example of what Etzioni is talking about is the
fact that other terms of racial classification used in the past have dropped
out of common use, such as octoroon, quadroon, etc. which denoted racial
intermarriage used in the south. Mori)
The ultimate Question
At stake is the question of what kind of American we envision
for the longer run. Some see a complete blur of racial lines with Americans
constituting some kind of new hybrid race. Time ran a cover story
on the subject, led by a computer composite of a future American with some
features of each race, a new rather handsome breed (almond shaped eyes,
straight but dark hair, milk chocolate skin). This would take much more
than a change in racial nomenclature, but it could serve as a step in that
direction.
Others are keen to maintain strict racial lines and oppose
intermarriage; these same people often seek to maintain the races as separate
"nations." (The term nation is significant because it indicates
a high degree of tribalism). In a world full of interracial strife, this
attitude - however understandable its defensive nature in responses to
racial prejudice and discrimination - leaves at least this communitarian
greatly troubled. The more communitarian view seems to be one in which
those who seek to uphold their separate group identities will do so (hopefully
viewing themselves and being viewed as subgroups of a more encompassing
community rather than as separate nations) but those who seek to redefine
themselves will be enabled to, leading to an ever larger group that is
free from racial categorization.
If a multiracial category is included in the 2000 Census,
further down the road, maybe as early as the 2010 Census, we may wish to
add one more category, that of "multi-ethnic" origin, one which
most Americans might to check. then we would live to recognize the full
importance of my favorite African American saying: We came in many ships
but we now ride in the same boat.
What is your opinion on the idea of racial categorization?
How do you categorize yourself racially? ethnically? are they the same?
how different?
Do you favor a mixed racial or ethnic category? Why or
Why not?
email me your opinion. bmori@calpoly.edu
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