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Millions of Latinos Deny Their Own Ethnicity on Census Forms, USC Study Says

pau gasol wiki.JPG
Pau Gasol is not Latino.
What race is Latino? We've pondered the issue before, and the correct answer is any of the above: Latinos can be black, white and almost anything in between, because Latino isn't a race, it's an ethnicity.

That makes things difficult enough for the folks who tally data for the U.S. Census, but now it appears there's a growing number of Latinos who don't even identify themselves as such.

A recent USC study says a lot of folks failed to check the Census' "Hispanic" box -- people who could have done so, given their background -- and that this is not good for the brown nation. According to a statement from the school:

As a result of some Latinos' propensity to not check the Hispanic race box on the census, a correct analysis of Hispanic achievement and mobility in America is undermined.

USC researchers are concerned because the Census is used to draw congressional district lines and help determine government spending. Latinos could be under-served as a result.

Boo-hoo, said Lou Dobbs.

But seriously, the study by USC's Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, published in the journal Social Science Research, found that about 6 percent of people with Hispanic or Latin American ancestry failed to check the "Spanish/Hispanic/Latino" box on the Census.

That's 2.5 million people, almost enough to fill up the county of San Diego -- and scare the hell out of the anti-immigrant suburb of Escondido.

But who are these people who don't think they're Latino? What are they? Aguileran?

christina aguilera burlesque rca.JPG
RCA
Christina Aguilera

Maybe they're those Latina Kim Kardashian wannabes you meet at the club who say they're "Spanish." (These types used to be called coconuts -- brown on the outside, white on the inside).

According to the school:

Non-Hispanic identification was most common among U.S.-born Latin Americans, respondents with mixed ancestries, those who speak only English and those who identify themselves on the race question as black or Asian, the study found.

There are also those folks who claim a clean and unfettered lineage that leads directly back to Spain (think Steve Lopez). (We call them people from New Mexico, where it's hard to find a Mexican, ironically). Why should they be Hispanic or Latino ethnicity when they're no different than someone with French or German heritage?

Laker Pau Gasol could certainly qualify to be part of the group with Hispanic ancestry but without Latino (a.k.a Latin American) ties. He's from Spain. And note that he's almost whiter than Conan O'Brien.

That's why West Coast Latinos have always embraced the term Latino. It ties the ethnicity to having indigenous, Latin American roots, not just Spanish ones. It differentiates people who are, say Mexican American, from Pau Gasol (no offense to either side).

If the Census did away with its ridiculous menu of ethnic options and stuck with Latino, as defined above, we'd clear up some of this.

USC seems to agree:

... Respondents' confusion with the terms ethnicity, ancestry and race often result in inconsistent answers on the U.S. Census surveys, the study found. Oftentimes the lines among these categories are blurred. And as immigrants assimilate, their identities shift.

But researchers think that using "ancestry" as a measure of ethnicity is a better tool. (As we demonstrate above, however, it might confuse Spanish with Latino).

Jody Agius Vallejo, assistant professor of sociology, blames assimilation for the disparity:

Scholars and politicians question whether and to what extent Latinos are assimilating. Some Latinos are not identifying as Latino and disappearing into the population.

Given the national debate on illegal immigration, though, maybe "disappearing" is the wrong word. Some folks see us everywhere they look, even if some of us are hiding behind words.

[@dennisjromero / djromero@laweekly.com / @LAWeeklyNews]

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15 comments
Damer
Damer

Essentially people do not identify with indigenous roots, they favour distant european ancestors instead.

nogracias
nogracias

that's not the case. If anything people like to identify with their native american roots. It is because latino only embraces the race but sudenly is being considered an ethnicity, that means, me as a peruvian, if i were living in the us, i stop being peruvian (etnically speaking not nationality) and i am just "latina" like a mexican, argentinian, cuban person. Sudenly i am one of them even if i have NOTHING in common with them other than language. That is ridiculous to me. I think these labels should stop existing. No one uses latino outside the us anyway. We use Habla hispana when refering spanish speaking countries

nogracias
nogracias

i meant to say "only embraces the language"oops

Daniel
Daniel

ok I am going to explain this becuase you Americans,use these word without having no idea of their meaning.

Latino; people who aro basiclly from countries latin lnguages were born, such as Italia, Portugal, Spain, Romania, France, they are basically white and come from Europe.

Those people you NOW call latino come from southamerican countries they speak Spanish the same way black Canadians/American speaks english, they don't have any racial connection with the Brittish who colonized the land centuries ago.

To speak the same language does not necesarially mean yor are the same then, so southamerican are Hispanofonic but not Hispanic/Latino in a strict sense of the word, becuase they don't come from Spain or the countries I typed before.

The fact that you use the term incorrectly does not mean that the real menaing of the word has changed.

Alberto
Alberto

La estupidez estadounidense no tiene límite ni aún que intenten poner un poco de luz sobre el tema este de hispanic,latinos ,etc,etc

A ver si de una vez os queda claro:

Latinos son los ROMANOS y los que fueron conquistados por los Romanos hace más de 2000 años.Casi toda Francia,Portugal,España,Rumanía e Italia son de cultura latina,por ende..LOS ESPAÑOLES SON LATINOS.

Cuando España LLEGÓ A AMERICA y empezó a conquistar aquellas tierras (junto con Portugal) se produjo un mestizaje de culturas entre europeos e indígenas.Con el paso del tiempo se llamó a todo esta comunidad formada por indígenas,negros,mestizos y blancos como LATINOAMERICA O IBEROAMERICA,por ser descendientes muchos de sus pobladores de un pueblo latino como es el español o el portugués.LOS ESPAÑOLES SI SON LATINOS...los que NO SON LATINOS SON LOS SUDAMERICANOS,esos son LATINOAMERICANOS.

Los españoles son hispanos...los hispanos ORIGINALES (recuerdan Gladiator? Máximo "El hispano") pues de ahí viene todo,coño...a ver si de un maldita vez se enteran que hispanic no es una raza y que los españoles son europeos,blancos y los PRIMEROS europeos que llegaron a ese país ahora llamado USA.

Sesshin
Sesshin

Hispanic and Latino are bad descriptors anyways.

Mexicans and Argentinians are the same? Puerto Ricans and Bolivians? Cubans and Peruvians?No, all of their cultures and genealogy  are very different and ideally there would be better descriptors taking that into consideration.

nogracias
nogracias

thiissss thank you. So because i speak spanish, just like a mexican or a puerto rican person does, suddenly i'm the same ethnicity as them? lol. no thankyou i  am not latina nor hispanic. I am only hispanic-speaking (just like americans are anglo speaking) but my ethnicity is peruvian, end of discussion.

jonolan
jonolan

What's more telling is that some people, most likely professional grievance-mongers, have a problem with this and what others to have one as well.

If they've assimilated, then that's to the good and they're no longer in the actual demographic that being supplied on the form.

Rob
Rob

If I came froma burrito republic I would lie about it too

Vilma
Vilma

The comments are indicative of the problem.  The terms Hispanic/Latino/Spanish are all confusing.  Given that they were established by a predominantly Anglo-Saxon/Protestant society trying to keep track of its immigrants, the terms were defined by people other than those we are referring to.  What do I do?  I fill in as many as I can relate to and the more the better.  If Hispanics/Latinos understood that one of the purposes of the Census Bureau is to allocate monies for social programs and education for different minorities and then perhaps they would not hesitate to "fill in" the boxes.  Of course our ancestors were here first and the point is that we are still here and still growing in numbers.  Now we have to get involved so we can grow in education, resources and opportunities.  FILL IN THE BOX!

a first-generation, puerto-rican cuban girl, raised in midwest who is Hispanic/Latino/Spanish and whatever "other" designation that fits.

Boomslang .
Boomslang .

But all labels exist just to keep track of ethnic groups.Before I even read the second paragraph I already knew the sole reason people do not check hispanic is because the want to check white.And this has always been the problem.Essentially people do not identify with indigenous roots , they favour distant european ancestors instead.Nobody would question a census if it was okay to pick white. People we can see thru all the lies and we know what's up.

Across latin america people keep a tab on ethnic groups the same way america does.So to place the blame on wasps would be sheer hypocrisy. Mexico, colombia etc.. have distincts labels for black people , mestizos , people with various indigenous ancestries.

zengfoo
zengfoo

See that jsut makes no sense at all dude, I dont get it.www.Total-Privacy dot US

Jenjuana
Jenjuana

Back when I was a radical, I wrote in "Mestiza". Whatever we choose to call ourselves, we're here in the place our ancestors lived and died. Call it North, Central or South America, we've always been here. 

norag60
norag60

i don't check hispanic, was born here and speak spanish. i am not hispanic, whatever that is.

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