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Census Bureau explores new Middle East/North Africa ethnic category

Census Bureau explores new Middle East/North Africa ethnic category

Steve Williams · Wednesday, January 7th 2015 at 7:39AM · 714 views
MARCH 24, 2014

BY JENS MANUEL KROGSTAD

Organizations representing people of Middle Eastern and North African descent are asking the Census Bureau to add a new ethnic category on forms. People of this heritage are now categorized as “white,” a decades-old practice advocacy groups say is inaccurate.

The new category would be broader than the Arab ancestry data collected by the Census Bureau since 1980. The Arab-American population is small but growing, and its exact size is disputed. The Census Bureau estimates there are 1.8 million Arab-Americans in the U.S., up 51% since 2000. But the Arab American Institute Foundation estimates there are nearly 3.7 million Arab Americans living in the country. The Arab-American population is also diverse, with people claiming ties to 22 countries and various religious backgrounds.

“When immigrants come here they’re very confused by American race classifications,” said Helen Hatab Samhan, former executive director of the Arab American Institute Foundation. “They don’t necessarily relate to them, and they don’t know where they fit.”

A coalition of groups and individuals—including the Arab American Institute Foundation—sent a letter to the Census Bureau last summer that asked for a separate “Middle East/North Africa” ethnic category.

A question about Hispanic origin, currently the only ethnic category, has been asked of all households since 1980. The census form instructs respondents that Hispanic is not a race.

People of Middle Eastern and North African descent have historically identified themselves as white on census forms. But during the 2010 census, activists launched a campaign that urged people to check “some other race” on the form and write in their ancestry. The campaign’s slogan was: “Check it right; you ain’t white!”

The Census Bureau is already looking at big changes to its form. One proposal would create a combined race and ethnicity question in which people would be offered all the race and Hispanic options in one place. Census data are vital to determining everything from how congressional districts are drawn to $400 billion in federal aid programs and enforcement of civil rights laws.

“We’re trying to develop a (race and ethnicity) question that satisfies everyone,” said Roberto Ramirez, a Census official who discussed the issue on a recent visit to the Pew Research Center. “It’s a very political endeavor. It always has been.”

Census officials say they are interested in further researching the Middle East/North Africa designation (also called MENA), and community leaders are optimistic the bureau will test a new ethnic category before the 2020 population count. Samhan said a meeting last week between Census Bureau Director John H. Thompson and groups asking for the new category included discussions about how to proceed with research.

In a combined race and ethnicity question tested during the 2010 Census Alternative Questionnaire Experiment, the white race category included several examples—among them “Egyptian” and “Lebanese”—to guide those who might check the box. But when census officials convened focus groups to study the proposed changes, people said the Egyptian and Lebanese examples were “wrong” and “inaccurate,” said Nicholas Jones, a Census official who recently visited the Pew Research Center to talk about the bureau’s research.

The push to be counted as something other than white is a reversal from a century ago. In the early 20th century, people from the Middle East argued in court to be counted as white instead of Asian. A major concern was anti-Asian legislation that sought to restrict immigration and deny Asians U.S. citizenship. A prominent example of this was the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.

Because of distrust of the government, some in Middle Eastern and North African communities need to be convinced that a more accurate population count is in their interest, said Samhan of the Arab American Institute Foundation. The Census Bureau came under criticism in 2004 when it was revealed the agency shared data that listed where Arab Americans lived by city and ZIP code with the Department of Homeland Security. The data, though publicly available online, were handed over to DHS less than three years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

It’s too soon to say whether a Middle East/North Africa category will appear on the 2020 census. Census officials say any changes would have to be approved by the Office of Management and Budget, which determines and defines the race and ethnicity categories. Any proposed topics must be submitted to Congress by 2017. Question wording is due to Congress the following year.

http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/...

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Steve Williams Coatesville, PA

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Comments (10)

S
Sylvainy R Wednesday, January 7th 2015 at 12:35PM

@ Steve.
Like I've said before he who knows not his history is doomed to repeat it

robert powell Wednesday, January 7th 2015 at 1:25PM


This I agree with Scholarly Blog.......

"-- When immigrants come here they’re very confused by American race classifications...Hispanic origin, currently the only ethnic category, has been asked of all households since 1980. The census form instructs respondents that Hispanic is not a race"

Posted By: Steve Williams
Wednesday, January 7th 2015 at 7:39AM

For the 1,912,258,111th Time All of Mankind is the Family of Adaam(s)

western or European "Truth", will someday catch up with History, Scholarship and Science----InshaaAllaah

African Asian History, Scholarship and Science ALREADY knows that there NO such things as 'blackWhiteRedYellow" racistlyIgnorant Human classifications..........

African Asian History, Scholarship and Science ALREADY knows that there is NO such thing as north/south/west/east AfricanAsian people

African Asian History, Scholarship and Science ALREADY knows that from 660-1492; NEARLY a THOUSAND years The Iberian *****ula, Sicily, Balkans, Turkey, India, Pacific, Sahara, subSahara, Magreeb WERE all one People----Linguistically, Culturally and Scholastically.

African Asian History, Scholarship and Science ALREADY knows that after the DISASTER of post1492 europeanColonialism barbarism and evilDestruction in the name of paganChristianity and THE DIVISION of People along racistlgnorant Lines Began......

so thanks steve for a worthy SUBJECT from the United Nations and People of the MODERN world......


robert powell Friday, January 9th 2015 at 8:26PM


http://billmoyers.com/Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Nigerian Author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: “I Became Black in America”

I became black in America and I really hadn’t thought of myself as black in Nigeria. I think that identity in

Nigeria was ethnic, religious…but race just wasn’t present. …

So I don’t have a problem at all, sort of having skin the color of chocolate. But in this country I came to realize…that meant something, that it came with baggage and with all of these assumptions. And that the idea of black achievement was a remarkable thing. Whereas for me in Nigeria, it wasn’t. It was not.


Steve Williams Friday, January 9th 2015 at 9:12PM

What is your ethnicity Robert?

robert powell Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 9:24AM


SUBJECT

Census Bureau explores new Middle East/North Africa ethnic category

what?----- your thought on your subject is SOOO untrue and false already OFF SUBJECT with...

What is your ethnicity Robert?
Friday, January 9th 2015 at 8:12PM
Steve Williams

What is your ethnicity steveAdam?



Steve Williams Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 9:36AM

My ethnicity is Eastern Pennsylvanian. Is North Africa/Middle East all the same ethnicity?

Steve Williams Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 9:38AM

And does the census bureau care that I am Eastern Pennsylvanian?

robert powell Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 10:30AM


SUBJECT

Census Bureau explores new Middle East/North Africa ethnic category

ethnicity

1. an ethnic group;
a social group that shares a common and distinctive culture, religion, language, or the like:

2. ethnic traits, background, allegiance, or association:
The graph shows class by gender and ethnicity.

⦁ The targeting of an individual because of their race or ethnicity.
⦁ It is important to note, however, that language and ethnicity are not the same.
⦁ The chadian government has avoided official recognition of ethnicity.

Word Origin and History for ethnicity

"ethnic character," 1953, from ethnic + -ity. Earlier it meant "paganism" (1772).

**********************

............And does the census bureau care that I am Eastern Pennsylvanian?

Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 8:38AM
Steve Williams

***********************************************************

**YES, for the English definition ---- Many at BIA, are Citizens of the United States of America

Since the European English Dictionary states Language is not to be considered

I, Robert Powell, am a Created Human Being of the Family of Adaam(as)

And many of those in AfricaAsia or North Africa/Middle East all the same ethnicity






Steve Williams Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 10:41AM

Ethnicity means "a people", my definition. Hispanic is not an ethnicity. Mexican is an ethnicity, Salvadoran is an ethnicity. The two are not to be confused. Ask any Salvadoran.

robert powell Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 1:32PM



SUBJECT

Census Bureau explores new Middle East/North Africa ethnic category

OFF OFF SUBJECT or is it.............steveAdam

.........Hispanic is not an ethnicity. Mexican is an ethnicity, Salvadoran is an ethnicity. The two are not to be confused. Ask any Salvadoran.

Saturday, January 10th 2015 at 9:41AM
Steve Williams

*******************************************************

It seems your racistIgnorance and ethnic Crisis is to NOW include the Hispanic, Mexican and Salvadoran people-----------

Shatter, and take your Stereotypical Racist Misconceptions from BIA, an African American Family site

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