Diverging Demography: Hispanic and Non-Hispanic Contributions to U.S. Population Redistribution and Diversity

The substantial growth and geographic dispersion of Hispanics is among the most important demographic trends in recent U.S. demographic history. Our county-level study examines how widespread Hispanic natural increase and net migration has combined with the demographic change among non-Hispanics to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Population research and policy review 2016-10, Vol.35 (5), p.705-725
Hauptverfasser: Johnson, Kenneth M., Lichter, Daniel T.
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description The substantial growth and geographic dispersion of Hispanics is among the most important demographic trends in recent U.S. demographic history. Our county-level study examines how widespread Hispanic natural increase and net migration has combined with the demographic change among non-Hispanics to produce an increasingly diverse population. This paper uses U.S. Census Bureau data and special tabulations of race/ethnic specific births and deaths from NCHS to highlight the demographic role of Hispanics as an engine of new county population growth and ethnoracial diversity across the U.S. landscape. It highlights key demographic processes—natural increase and net migration—that accounted for 1990–2010 changes in the absolute and relative sizes of the Hispanic and non-Hispanic populations. Hispanics accounted for the majority of all U.S. population growth between 2000 and 2010. Yet, Hispanics represented only 16 % of the U.S. population in 2010. Most previous research has focused on Hispanic immigration; here, we examine how natural increase and net migration among both the Hispanic and non-Hispanic population contribute to the nation's growing diversity. Indeed, the demographic impact of rapid Hispanic growth has been reinforced by minimal white population growth due to low fertility, fewer women of reproductive age and growing mortality among the aging white population America's burgeoning Hispanic population has left a large demographic footprint that is magnified by low and declining fertility and increasing mortality among America's aging non-Hispanic population.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s11113-016-9403-3
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; PAIS Index; SpringerLink Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Aging
Aging (natural)
Births
Censuses
Childbirth & labor
Demographic change
Demographics
Demography
Depopulation
Diversity of citizenship
Ethnicity
Females
Fertility
Fertility rates
Geography
Hispanic Americans
Hispanic people
Hispanics
Human migration
Immigrants
Immigration
Internal migration
Latin American cultural groups
Migration
Minority & ethnic groups
Mortality
Mortality rates
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Noncitizens
Population
Population aging
Population decline
Population distribution
Population dynamics
Population Economics
Population growth
Race
Rural areas
Social Sciences
Sociology
Statistical analysis
Trends
United States
White people
title Diverging Demography: Hispanic and Non-Hispanic Contributions to U.S. Population Redistribution and Diversity
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