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Identities in the New Ethnic Politics: The Rise of

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The Rise of Pan-ethnicity ... building a political agenda or movement around this regional identity and shared policy ... African Americans in the South lost ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Identities in the New Ethnic Politics: The Rise of


1
Identities in the New Ethnic Politics The Rise
of Pan-ethnicity
  • Political Science 61 / Chicano/Latino Studies 64
  • October 9, 2007

2
Todays Topic
  • Pan-ethnicity
  • The Final Pillar of Contemporary Minority Politics

3
Pan-Ethnicity
  • Definition an ethnic identity defined by
    region, not country, of origin
  • ExamplesAsian American or Latino
  • U.S. ethnicities traditionally understood in
    national terms
  • Intergroup cooperation among multiple
    national-origin groups
  • Political building a political agenda or
    movement around this regional identity and shared
    policy needs

4
General Rule 1U.S. Ethnic Identities Fluid
  • Immigrants learn U.S. conceptions of their
    identity
  • 19th Century European immigrants immigrated with
    sub-national/regional identities and, became
    national ethics from newly forming countries
  • Institutions (church, politics, neighborhood)
    reinforced national identities
  • Meaning and racial conception of European
    national identities changed over time
  • Exception African migrants to slavery had most
    national or regional roots taken from them and
    were always understood racially

5
General Rule 2 Ethnic Identities Diminish Over
2nd/3rd Generations
  • Intermarriage quickly blurs pure national
    origin categories
  • Other identities blur ethnic distinctions
  • Religion
  • Race
  • Ideology
  • Immigrant generation
  • In other words, local institutions see diminished
    ability to maintain identities

6
At Least Until Contemporary Era
  • Immigration from high sending countries
    slows/stops after 20-30 years
  • Allows the 2nd/3rd generation to reshape national
    origin identity to ethnic identity
  • In current era, however, Mexican immigration high
    since the 1950s
  • Several other national-origin groups will soon
    see a third generation

7
General Rule 3 Counting is Highly Contested
  • Census inconsistent in measuring race and
    ethnicity
  • Race and ethnicity are socially constructed, so
    no consistent understanding of categories
  • Generally behind mass practices
  • Ethnic group leaders have sought to avoid
    categorization as a racial group
  • Todays controversies (see Prewitt reading)
  • Latinos as ethnic, not racial category
  • At mass level, many Latinos identify racially
  • Arab/Middle Eastern racial category
  • Multi-racial self-identification

8
Contemporary Pan-Ethnicity is Substantively
Different
  • Government has promoted
  • VRA an example
  • Government collects data to measure
    pan-ethnicity, so relative status can be measured
  • Access to some state resources allocated by
    race/ethnicity
  • Ethnic leaders organize pan-ethnically
  • Sustained immigration creates foundation for more
    durable identities across generations
  • Communications ensure that immigrants know about
    U.S. ethnic categories before migration

9
U.S. Population by Race, 2000
10
Hispanic and non-Hispanic Population, 2000
11
But, Pan-Ethnicity the Exception at the Mass Level
  • Low affect across national origin populations
    within pan-ethnic groups
  • AffectTo show a fondness for to like to use or
    practice to choose (Webster's Dictionary)
  • Traditionally, little contact between Asian
    Americans or Latinos
  • Latinos and Asian Americans increasingly living
    around each other
  • Perception of common Latino or Asian American
    culture low by Latinos or Asian Americans

12
When Does a Pan-ethnic Identity Form?
  • Felix Padilla (On the Nature of Latino
    Ethnicity)
  • Latinos (or Asian Americans) come into contact
    with each other
  • Latinos (or Asian Americans) share experiences
    that exclude them from majority communities
  • Latinos (or Asian Americans) of different origins
    work together to address their common exclusion
    and form a new identity based on shared struggle
  • PadillaLatino (or Asian American) identity is
    inherently political

13
Who is Likely to Adopt a Pan-ethnic Identity?
  • From Lien, Conway, and Wong (for Asian Americans)
  • Indians (relative to Chinese)
  • Asian Americans who perceive a shared Asian
    culture
  • Strong partisans
  • U.S. citizens
  • Involved in ethnic causes
  • Older people
  • Employed people
  • Negative predictors Asian Americans who
    experienced discrimination, 1st generation, women

14
Pan-Ethnic Identification Among Asian Americans
Source Lien, Conway, and Wong
15
So, Why Does Pan-Ethnicity Matter?
  • Provides foundation for the allocation of state
    resources
  • Majority populations increasingly view minorities
    in pan-ethnic terms
  • Ethnic leaders organize pan-ethnically
  • So, pan-ethnic identification will grow among
    Latinos and Asian Americans
  • And other pan-ethnic populations?

16
For Next Time
  • The first essay is due next Tuesday. Be prepared
    to discuss your thesis Thursday.
  • QUESTION FOR READING As Reconstruction came to
    an end, African Americans in the South lost
    rights they had exercised.
  • Identify these rights and how they were taken
    away.
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