Census 2000 Shows America’s Diversity.

Census 2000 results released by the Census Bureau show a racially diverse America. However, relatively few about 2.4 percent nationally took advantage of a first-ever option for respondents to identify themselves as belonging to more than one race.

The first of a series of Census 2000 briefs, titled Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin, showed the following for the 274.6 million people who reported only one race:

White – 75.1 percent

Black or African American – 12.3 percent

American Indian and Alaska Native – 0.9 percent

Asian – 3.6 percent

Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander – 0.1 percent

Some other race – 5.5 percent

The Census Bureau also reported that Hispanics, who may be of any race, totaled 35.3 million, or about 13 percent of the total population. This information was obtained from a separate question on Hispanic or Latino origin.

Of the 6.8 million people who reported more than one race, 93 percent reported two races. The most common combinations were:

White and some other race – 32 percent

White and American Indian and Alaska Native – 16 percent

White and Asian – nearly 13 percent

White and Black or African American – about 11 percent

Of all respondents who reported more than one race, about 7 percent indicated three or more races.

Those who reported only one race are described as “alone,” those who selected one or more races as “alone or in combination.” The “alone or in combination” percentages are shown below:

White 77.1

Black or African American 12.9

American Indian and Alaska Native 1.5

Asian 4.2

Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 0.3

Some other race 6.6

Because anyone who reported two or more races is included in the tally for each of those races when using the “alone or in combination” concept, the sum of all these groups exceeds 100 percent of the population.

Nearly 48 percent of Hispanics identified as White alone and about 42 percent reported “Some other race” alone. About 6 percent of all Hispanics reported two or more races compared with less than 2 percent of non-Hispanics. Hispanics accounted for 97 percent of those who reported “Some other race” only.

The race categories for Census 2000 (except for “some other race,” which the Census Bureau added) and the “two or more races” category were promulgated in federal race-reporting guidelines by the Office of Management and Budget in 1997. The changes were designed to reflect more accurately the nation’s racial diversity.

The question on race for Census 2000 was different from the race question used for the 1990 census, making direct comparisons between the two censuses difficult. The major difference derives from instructing respondents to mark “one or more races” for the first time in a U.S. population census. Other differences include splitting the Asian and
Pacific Islander category into two separate race categories in 2000; combining the three separate identifiers Indian (Amer.), Eskimo, Aleut in the category “American Indian or Alaska Native population”; and reversing the order of the questions on race and Hispanic origin, with the one on Hispanic origin placed first in 2000.

How the Race and Hispanic Origin Questions Were Asked CLICK below:

http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2001/racequestion.pdf

For more information at http://www.census.gov

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