The use of nativity data to estimate ethnic characteristics and patterns

https://doi.org/10.1016/0049-089X(85)90011-0Get rights and content

Abstract

Until recently, nativity data for the first and second generations (the foreign stock) have been the primary source of census information on white ethnic groups in the United States. With the development of an ancestry item, it is now possible to deal with all generations regardless of birthplace. The 1979 Current Population Survey provides a rare opportunity to cross-tabulate the results obtained from each system in order to determine the degree of overlap in the populations and the extent to which inferences about the social characteristics of ethnic groups are altered. The degree of overlap varies enormously among groups, but the results show that inferences based on nativity data are fairly close to those that would be obtained with the use of the ethnic ancestry item. This is an encouraging result for researchers obliged to use nativity data in working with earlier censuses.

References (8)

  • N. Carpenter
  • E.P. Hutchinson
  • A.J. Jaffee et al.
  • G. Klein et al.

    The United States and Yugoslavia: divergent approaches toward ethnicity

There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

This is a revised version of a paper presented at the April 1983 annual meeting of the Population Association of America. This article is a by-product of a project supported by the Russell Sage Foundation to prepare a 1980 census monograph on ethnic and racial groups in the United States. Financial support was also received from the University of Arizona

View full text