multiracial


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  • adj

Words related to multiracial

made up of or involving or acting on behalf of various races

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
'This is to enable us to live together in unison in a bid of building a fully developed country and become a good example of a successful multiracial nation,' he said.
According to the population and housing census in 2017, the number of multiracial family members living in Mapo-gu was 5,585.
and Mexican officials worked through the "process of disentangling the diverse threads of the multiracial borderlands" (4) by using Spanish- and English-language archives located in both countries.
And, as the girl who couldn't find a salon to style my frizzy, intolerably multiracial hair for my bat mitzvah, I would have known I wasn't alone.
Among minority groups, the greatest growth is projected for multiracial, Asian and Hispanic populations, with 2018-60 growth rates of 176, 93 and 86 percent, respectively.
It is likely that the number of multiracial children in the United States will increase many-fold in the next few decades, and the country will no longer remain a White majority country.
Parts 1 and 2 looks at antiblackness in multiracial contexts of the diaspora, in areas such as residential segregation, punitive schooling, juvenile imprisonment, policing practices, and political mobilization.
Ever since the 2000 Census, which marked the first time individuals were able to mark off more than one race, individuals identifying as multiracial has steadily increased to a total of 9 million people, approximately 3 percent of the population.
With these marriages have come an increase in the births of mixedrace and multiracial children.
What I discovered in the later chapters is a provocative book about the lives of multiracial Africans in British Eastern and Southern Africa from the early to the mid twentieth century.
"Multiracial Americans are at the cutting edge of social and demographic change in the US.--young, proud, tolerant, and growing at a rate three times as fast as the population as a whole." (Pew Research Center, June 11, 2015)
Daughters of interracial parents are more likely than sons to identify as multiracial, and this especially is true for children of black-white couples, according to a study in American Sociological Review.
The multiple heritage (i.e., multiracial, biracial) population has been identified by the US Census Bureau as the fastest growing population in the US.
In his experimental combination of poetic forms, Japanese American writer David Mura illuminates the obstacles of racism and orientalism in America as he depicts struggles of multiracial identity.
Joseph, Ralina L., Transcending Blackness: From the New Millennium Mulatta to the Exceptional Multiracial, Duke University Press, Durham, NC, 2012, ISBN 9 7808 2235 2921, 223 pp., $23.95.
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