Author:
Anderson Margo,Fienberg Stephen E.
Abstract
The article examines the relationship between the history of the census undercount and classification of race and ethnicity in the United States Census. The US decennial census was created to apportion seats in the House of Representatives among the states. The race classification derives from the provisions of the 1787 federal Constitution, which required that the census differentiate slave and free persons and exclude Indians not taxed for the purposes of Congressional apportionment. The current race and classification used by federal agencies is promulgated by the Office of Management and Budget as `Standards for Maintaining, Collecting, and Presenting Data on Race and Ethnicity'. The article traces the history of the categories, the development of methods for measuring census accuracy, particularly for measuring undercount, and the conceptualization of the differential undercount as a minority undercount. Finally it discusses potential implications of the recent changes in the classification to permit identification with more than one race category on the measurement of census accuracy.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
48 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Of Microscopes and Meeting Places: A Literature Review Examining Barriers to Indigenous Participation in STEM;Education Sciences;2024-01-31
2. The Canadian platform for research online to investigate health, quality of life, cognition, behaviour, function, and caregiving in aging (CAN-PROTECT): study protocol, platform description, and preliminary analyses;2023-12-17
3. Materializing the metaphor: Theorizing the food desert as a sociospatial–legal instrument in the production of space;Human Geography;2023-05-16
4. Why, when, and from whom: considerations for collecting and reporting race and ethnicity data in HCI;Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems;2023-04-19
5. Transnational Couples: The Intersections of Race, Ethnicity, Nativity, and Gender;Journal of Feminist Family Therapy;2022-10-02