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Citation

Chew, Kenneth S. Y.; Eggebeen, David; & Uhlenberg, Peter (1989). American Children in Multiracial Households. Sociological Perspectives, 32(1), 65-85.

Abstract

This study provides a demographic portrait of multiracial households, using children as the units of analysis. The authors conceptualize 3 dimensions for understanding multiracial qualities: 1) the racial composition of a household overall, 2) where in the household a racial difference exists relative to the household head, and 3) where in the household a racial difference exists relative to each child. Using microdata from the 1980 US census, the authors explore the 1st 2 of these dimensions and test 2 propositions about the links between racial diversity and other nonracial attributes of children's household environments. The finding is made, among other things, that the largest proportion of children live in Asian-white households, and that about 60% live in households headed by mixed-race couples. Support for the notion that attributes of multiracial households fall between those of their same-race counterparts was mixed. Nonetheless, there appears to be a link between location of diversity and some nonracial characteristics of household.

URL

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12342454

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

1989

Journal Title

Sociological Perspectives

Author(s)

Chew, Kenneth S. Y.
Eggebeen, David
Uhlenberg, Peter