Interrogating Race: Color, Racial Categories, and Class Across the Americas

We address long-standing debates on the utility of racial categories and color scales for understanding inequality in the United States and Latin America, using novel data that enable comparisons of these measures across both broad regions. In particular, we attend to the degree to which color and r...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American behavioral scientist (Beverly Hills) 2016-04, Vol.60 (4), p.538-555
Hauptverfasser: Bailey, Stanley R., Fialho, Fabrício M., Penner, Andrew M.
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creator Bailey, Stanley R.
Fialho, Fabrício M.
Penner, Andrew M.
description We address long-standing debates on the utility of racial categories and color scales for understanding inequality in the United States and Latin America, using novel data that enable comparisons of these measures across both broad regions. In particular, we attend to the degree to which color and racial category inequality operate independently of parental socioeconomic status. We find a variety of patterns of racial category and color inequality, but that in most countries accounting for maternal education changes our coefficients by 5% or less. Overall, we argue that several posited divergences in ethnoracial stratification processes in the United States, compared with Latin America, might be overstated. We conclude that the comparison of the effects of multiple ethnoracial markers, such as color and racial categories, for the analysis of social stratification holds substantial promise for untangling the complexities of “race” across the Americas.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Complete A-Z List; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Class
Color
Inequality
Latin America
Mothers
Parent socioeconomic status
Parents & parenting
Race
Racial differences
Racial differentiation
Skin
Social classes
Social stratification
Socioeconomic status
Studies
United States
title Interrogating Race: Color, Racial Categories, and Class Across the Americas
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