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677 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 8 (2018)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0677 and id is 1 raw text is: The Census
Race
Classification:
Is It Doing Its
Job?

By
KENNETH PREWITT

Aligning census ethnoracial categories with America's
changing demography is a never-ending task and
becomes more difficult when identity claims are ration-
ales for altering categories. We examine four current
problems: (1) the Census Bureau projects a population
more nonwhite than white by midcentury-social
demographers document trends pointing to a different
racial future; (2) the census inadequately measures
second- and third-generation Americans, limiting the
nation's understanding of why some immigrant groups
are racialized while others are whitened; (3) on
health, education, and employment, there is more int-
rarace than between-race variability, which is better
measured for Asians and Hispanics than it is for whites
and blacks; and (4) consistency in racial self-identifica-
tion is stronger for whites, blacks, and Asians than for
Hispanics, Native Americans, and biracial groups, low-
ering the reliability of race data. These measurement
problems weaken policy choices relevant to economic
growth, social justice, immigrant assimilation, govern-
ment reforms, and an enlightened public.
Keywords: majority-minority; assimilation; intrarace
variability; identity rationales; white
nationalism; statistical races
America's racial classification can be traced
to 1735, when Carl Linnaeus, the father of
taxonomy, briefly shifted his attention from
flora and fauna-he was a botanist-and fear-
lessly divided the human species into four sub-
species: Americanus, Asiaticus, Africanus,
Europeaeus. A few decades later, the classifica-
tion was slightly modified by a German doctor,
Johan Blumenbach, in his influential On the
Natural Varieties of Mankind. He divided the
Asians into the Mongolian and Malaysian; he
Kenneth Prewitt is the Carnegie Professor at Columbia
University, President of the American Academy of
Political and Social Science, past director of the Census
Bureau, and author of What Is Your Race? The Census
and Our Flawed Effort to Classify Americans (Princeton
University Press 2013).
Correspondence: kp2058@columbia.edu
DOI: 10.1177/0002716218756629

ANNALS, AAPSS, 677, May 2018

8

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