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Race (human categorization)

Race is a categorization of humans based on shared physical or social qualities into groups generally viewed as distinct within a given society.[1] The term came into common usage during the 16th century, when it was used to refer to groups of various kinds, including those characterized by close kinship relations.[2] By the 17th century, the term began to refer to physical (phenotypical) traits, and then later to national affiliations. Modern science regards race as a social construct, an identity which is assigned based on rules made by society.[3][4] While partly based on physical similarities within groups, race does not have an inherent physical or biological meaning.[1][5][6] The concept of race is foundational to racism, the belief that humans can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another.

Social conceptions and groupings of races have varied over time, often involving folk taxonomies that define essential types of individuals based on perceived traits.[7] Today, scientists consider such biological essentialism obsolete,[8] and generally discourage racial explanations for collective differentiation in both physical and behavioral traits.[9][10][11][12][13]

Even though there is a broad scientific agreement that essentialist and typological conceptions of race are untenable,[14][15][16][17][18][19] scientists around the world continue to conceptualize race in widely differing ways.[20] While some researchers continue to use the concept of race to make distinctions among fuzzy sets of traits or observable differences in behavior, others in the scientific community suggest that the idea of race is inherently naive[9] or simplistic.[21] Still others argue that, among humans, race has no taxonomic significance because all living humans belong to the same subspecies, Homo sapiens sapiens.[22][23]

Since the second half of the 20th century, race has been associated with discredited theories of scientific racism, and has become increasingly seen as a largely pseudoscientific system of classification. Although still used in general contexts, race has often been replaced by less ambiguous and/or loaded terms: populations, people(s), ethnic groups, or communities, depending on context.[24][25] Its use in genetics was formally renounced by the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in 2023.[26]

Defining race

Modern scholarship views racial categories as socially constructed, that is, race is not intrinsic to human beings but rather an identity created, often by socially dominant groups, to establish meaning in a social context. Different cultures define different racial groups, often focused on the largest groups of social relevance, and these definitions can change over time.

The establishment of racial boundaries often involves the subjugation of groups defined as racially inferior, as in the one-drop rule used in the 19th-century United States to exclude those with any amount of African ancestry from the dominant racial grouping, defined as "white".[1] Such racial identities reflect the cultural attitudes of imperial powers dominant during the age of European colonial expansion.[5] This view rejects the notion that race is biologically defined.[29][30][31][32]

According to geneticist David Reich, "while race may be a social construct, differences in genetic ancestry that happen to correlate to many of today's racial constructs are real."[33] In response to Reich, a group of 67 scientists from a broad range of disciplines wrote that his concept of race was "flawed" as "the meaning and significance of the groups is produced through social interventions".[34]

Although commonalities in physical traits such as facial features, skin color, and hair texture comprise part of the race concept, this linkage is a social distinction rather than an inherently biological one.[1] Other dimensions of racial groupings include shared history, traditions, and language. For instance, African-American English is a language spoken by many African Americans, especially in areas of the United States where racial segregation exists. Furthermore, people often self-identify as members of a race for political reasons.[1]

When people define and talk about a particular conception of race, they create a social reality through which social categorization is achieved.[35] In this sense, races are said to be social constructs.[36] These constructs develop within various legal, economic, and sociopolitical contexts, and may be the effect, rather than the cause, of major social situations.[clarify][37] While race is understood to be a social construct by many, most scholars agree that race has real material effects in the lives of people through institutionalized practices of preference and discrimination.[citation needed]

Socioeconomic factors, in combination with early but enduring views of race, have led to considerable suffering within disadvantaged racial groups.[38] Racial discrimination often coincides with racist mindsets, whereby the individuals and ideologies of one group come to perceive the members of an outgroup as both racially defined and morally inferior.[39] As a result, racial groups possessing relatively little power often find themselves excluded or oppressed, while hegemonic individuals and institutions are charged with holding racist attitudes.[40] Racism has led to many instances of tragedy, including slavery and genocide.[41]

In some countries, law enforcement uses race to profile suspects. This use of racial categories is frequently criticized for perpetuating an outmoded understanding of human biological variation, and promoting stereotypes. Because in some societies racial groupings correspond closely with patterns of social stratification, for social scientists studying social inequality, race can be a significant variable. As sociological factors, racial categories may in part reflect subjective attributions, self-identities, and social institutions.[42][43]

Scholars continue to debate the degrees to which racial categories are biologically warranted and socially constructed.[44] For example, in 2008, John Hartigan, Jr. argued for a view of race that focused primarily on culture, but which does not ignore the potential relevance of biology or genetics.[45] Accordingly, the racial paradigms employed in different disciplines vary in their emphasis on biological reduction as contrasted with societal construction.

In the social sciences, theoretical frameworks such as racial formation theory and critical race theory investigate implications of race as social construction by exploring how the images, ideas and assumptions of race are expressed in everyday life. A large body of scholarship has traced the relationships between the historical, social production of race in legal and criminal language, and their effects on the policing and disproportionate incarceration of certain groups.

Historical origins of racial classification

 
The "three great races" according to Meyers Konversations-Lexikon of 1885–90. The subtypes are:
The Mongoloid race sees the widest geographic distribution, including all of the Americas, North Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia, and the entire inhabited Arctic as well as most of Central Asia and the Pacific Islands.

Groups of humans have always identified themselves as distinct from neighboring groups, but such differences have not always been understood to be natural, immutable and global. These features are the distinguishing features of how the concept of race is used today. In this way the idea of race as we understand it today came about during the historical process of exploration and conquest which brought Europeans into contact with groups from different continents, and of the ideology of classification and typology found in the natural sciences.[46] The term race was often used in a general biological taxonomic sense,[24] starting from the 19th century, to denote genetically differentiated human populations defined by phenotype.[47][48]

The modern concept of race emerged as a product of the colonial enterprises of European powers from the 16th to 18th centuries which identified race in terms of skin color and physical differences. Author Rebecca F. Kennedy argues that the Greeks and Romans would have found such concepts confusing in relation to their own systems of classification.[49] According to Bancel et al., the epistemological moment where the modern concept of race was invented and rationalized lies somewhere between 1730 and 1790.[50]

Colonialism

According to Smedley and Marks the European concept of "race", along with many of the ideas now associated with the term, arose at the time of the scientific revolution, which introduced and privileged the study of natural kinds, and the age of European imperialism and colonization which established political relations between Europeans and peoples with distinct cultural and political traditions.[46][51] As Europeans encountered people from different parts of the world, they speculated about the physical, social, and cultural differences among various human groups. The rise of the Atlantic slave trade, which gradually displaced an earlier trade in slaves from throughout the world, created a further incentive to categorize human groups in order to justify the subordination of African slaves.[52]

Drawing on sources from classical antiquity and upon their own internal interactions – for example, the hostility between the English and Irish powerfully influenced early European thinking about the differences between people[53] – Europeans began to sort themselves and others into groups based on physical appearance, and to attribute to individuals belonging to these groups behaviors and capacities which were claimed to be deeply ingrained. A set of folk beliefs took hold that linked inherited physical differences between groups to inherited intellectual, behavioral, and moral qualities.[54] Similar ideas can be found in other cultures,[55] for example in China, where a concept often translated as "race" was associated with supposed common descent from the Yellow Emperor, and used to stress the unity of ethnic groups in China. Brutal conflicts between ethnic groups have existed throughout history and across the world.[56]

Early taxonomic models

The first post-Graeco-Roman published classification of humans into distinct races seems to be François Bernier's Nouvelle division de la terre par les différents espèces ou races qui l'habitent ("New division of Earth by the different species or races which inhabit it"), published in 1684.[57] In the 18th century the differences among human groups became a focus of scientific investigation. But the scientific classification of phenotypic variation was frequently coupled with racist ideas about innate predispositions of different groups, always attributing the most desirable features to the White, European race and arranging the other races along a continuum of progressively undesirable attributes. The 1735 classification of Carl Linnaeus, inventor of zoological taxonomy, divided the human species Homo sapiens into continental varieties of europaeus, asiaticus, americanus, and afer, each associated with a different humour: sanguine, melancholic, choleric, and phlegmatic, respectively.[58][59] Homo sapiens europaeus was described as active, acute, and adventurous, whereas Homo sapiens afer was said to be crafty, lazy, and careless.[60]

The 1775 treatise "The Natural Varieties of Mankind", by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach proposed five major divisions: the Caucasoid race, the Mongoloid race, the Ethiopian race (later termed Negroid), the American Indian race, and the Malayan race, but he did not propose any hierarchy among the races.[60] Blumenbach also noted the graded transition in appearances from one group to adjacent groups and suggested that "one variety of mankind does so sensibly pass into the other, that you cannot mark out the limits between them".[61]

From the 17th through 19th centuries, the merging of folk beliefs about group differences with scientific explanations of those differences produced what Smedley has called an "ideology of race".[51] According to this ideology, races are primordial, natural, enduring and distinct. It was further argued that some groups may be the result of mixture between formerly distinct populations, but that careful study could distinguish the ancestral races that had combined to produce admixed groups.[56] Subsequent influential classifications by Georges Buffon, Petrus Camper and Christoph Meiners all classified "Negros" as inferior to Europeans.[60] In the United States the racial theories of Thomas Jefferson were influential. He saw Africans as inferior to Whites especially in regards to their intellect, and imbued with unnatural sexual appetites, but described Native Americans as equals to whites.[62]

Polygenism vs monogenism

In the last two decades of the 18th century, the theory of polygenism, the belief that different races had evolved separately in each continent and shared no common ancestor,[63] was advocated in England by historian Edward Long and anatomist Charles White, in Germany by ethnographers Christoph Meiners and Georg Forster, and in France by Julien-Joseph Virey. In the US, Samuel George Morton, Josiah Nott and Louis Agassiz promoted this theory in the mid-19th century. Polygenism was popular and most widespread in the 19th century, culminating in the founding of the Anthropological Society of London (1863), which, during the period of the American Civil War, broke away from the Ethnological Society of London and its monogenic stance, their underlined difference lying, relevantly, in the so-called "Negro question": a substantial racist view by the former,[64] and a more liberal view on race by the latter.[65]

Modern scholarship

Models of human evolution

Today, all humans are classified as belonging to the species Homo sapiens. However, this is not the first species of homininae: the first species of genus Homo, Homo habilis, evolved in East Africa at least 2 million years ago, and members of this species populated different parts of Africa in a relatively short time. Homo erectus evolved more than 1.8 million years ago, and by 1.5 million years ago had spread throughout Europe and Asia. Virtually all physical anthropologists agree that Archaic Homo sapiens (A group including the possible species H. heidelbergensis, H. rhodesiensis and H. neanderthalensis) evolved out of African Homo erectus (sensu lato) or Homo ergaster.[66][67] Anthropologists support the idea that anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) evolved in North or East Africa from an archaic human species such as H. heidelbergensis and then migrated out of Africa, mixing with and replacing H. heidelbergensis and H. neanderthalensis populations throughout Europe and Asia, and H. rhodesiensis populations in Sub-Saharan Africa (a combination of the Out of Africa and Multiregional models).[68][verification needed]

Biological classification

In the early 20th century, many anthropologists taught that race was an entirely biological phenomenon and that this was core to a person's behavior and identity, a position commonly called racial essentialism.[69] This, coupled with a belief that linguistic, cultural, and social groups fundamentally existed along racial lines, formed the basis of what is now called scientific racism.[70] After the Nazi eugenics program, along with the rise of anti-colonial movements, racial essentialism lost widespread popularity.[71] New studies of culture and the fledgling field of population genetics undermined the scientific standing of racial essentialism, leading race anthropologists to revise their conclusions about the sources of phenotypic variation.[69] A significant number of modern anthropologists and biologists in the West came to view race as an invalid genetic or biological designation.[72]

The first to challenge the concept of race on empirical grounds were the anthropologists Franz Boas, who provided evidence of phenotypic plasticity due to environmental factors,[73] and Ashley Montagu, who relied on evidence from genetics.[74] E. O. Wilson then challenged the concept from the perspective of general animal systematics, and further rejected the claim that "races" were equivalent to "subspecies".[75]

Human genetic variation is predominantly within races, continuous, and complex in structure, which is inconsistent with the concept of genetic human races.[76] According to the biological anthropologist Jonathan Marks,[46]

By the 1970s, it had become clear that (1) most human differences were cultural; (2) what was not cultural was principally polymorphic – that is to say, found in diverse groups of people at different frequencies; (3) what was not cultural or polymorphic was principally clinal – that is to say, gradually variable over geography; and (4) what was left – the component of human diversity that was not cultural, polymorphic, or clinal – was very small.

A consensus consequently developed among anthropologists and geneticists that race as the previous generation had known it – as largely discrete, geographically distinct, gene pools – did not exist.

Subspecies

The term race in biology is used with caution because it can be ambiguous. Generally, when it is used it is effectively a synonym of subspecies.[77] (For animals, the only taxonomic unit below the species level is usually the subspecies;[78] there are narrower infraspecific ranks in botany, and race does not correspond directly with any of them.) Traditionally, subspecies are seen as geographically isolated and genetically differentiated populations.[79] Studies of human genetic variation show that human populations are not geographically isolated,[80] and their genetic differences are far smaller than those among comparable subspecies.[81]

In 1978, Sewall Wright suggested that human populations that have long inhabited separated parts of the world should, in general, be considered different subspecies by the criterion that most individuals of such populations can be allocated correctly by inspection. Wright argued that, "It does not require a trained anthropologist to classify an array of Englishmen, West Africans, and Chinese with 100% accuracy by features, skin color, and type of hair despite so much variability within each of these groups that every individual can easily be distinguished from every other."[82] While in practice subspecies are often defined by easily observable physical appearance, there is not necessarily any evolutionary significance to these observed differences, so this form of classification has become less acceptable to evolutionary biologists.[83] Likewise this typological approach to race is generally regarded as discredited by biologists and anthropologists.[84][16]

Ancestrally differentiated populations (clades)

In 2000, philosopher Robin Andreasen proposed that cladistics might be used to categorize human races biologically, and that races can be both biologically real and socially constructed.[85] Andreasen cited tree diagrams of relative genetic distances among populations published by Luigi Cavalli-Sforza as the basis for a phylogenetic tree of human races (p. 661). Biological anthropologist Jonathan Marks (2008) responded by arguing that Andreasen had misinterpreted the genetic literature: "These trees are phenetic (based on similarity), rather than cladistic (based on monophyletic descent, that is from a series of unique ancestors)."[86] Evolutionary biologist Alan Templeton (2013) argued that multiple lines of evidence falsify the idea of a phylogenetic tree structure to human genetic diversity, and confirm the presence of gene flow among populations.[32] Marks, Templeton, and Cavalli-Sforza all conclude that genetics does not provide evidence of human races.[32][87]

Previously, anthropologists Lieberman and Jackson (1995) had also critiqued the use of cladistics to support concepts of race. They argued that "the molecular and biochemical proponents of this model explicitly use racial categories in their initial grouping of samples". For example, the large and highly diverse macroethnic groups of East Indians, North Africans, and Europeans are presumptively grouped as Caucasians prior to the analysis of their DNA variation. They argued that this a priori grouping limits and skews interpretations, obscures other lineage relationships, deemphasizes the impact of more immediate clinal environmental factors on genomic diversity, and can cloud our understanding of the true patterns of affinity.[88]

In 2015, Keith Hunley, Graciela Cabana, and Jeffrey Long analyzed the Human Genome Diversity Project sample of 1,037 individuals in 52 populations,[89] finding that diversity among non-African populations is the result of a serial founder effect process, with non-African populations as a whole nested among African populations, that "some African populations are equally related to other African populations and to non-African populations," and that "outside of Africa, regional groupings of populations are nested inside one another, and many of them are not monophyletic."[89] Earlier research had also suggested that there has always been considerable gene flow between human populations, meaning that human population groups are not monophyletic.[79] Rachel Caspari has argued that, since no groups currently regarded as races are monophyletic, by definition none of these groups can be clades.[90]

Clines

One crucial innovation in reconceptualizing genotypic and phenotypic variation was the anthropologist C. Loring Brace's observation that such variations, insofar as it is affected by natural selection, slow migration, or genetic drift, are distributed along geographic gradations or clines.[91] For example, with respect to skin color in Europe and Africa, Brace writes:

To this day, skin color grades by imperceptible means from Europe southward around the eastern end of the Mediterranean and up the Nile into Africa. From one end of this range to the other, there is no hint of a skin color boundary, and yet the spectrum runs from the lightest in the world at the northern edge to as dark as it is possible for humans to be at the equator.[92]

In part this is due to isolation by distance. This point called attention to a problem common to phenotype-based descriptions of races (for example, those based on hair texture and skin color): they ignore a host of other similarities and differences (for example, blood type) that do not correlate highly with the markers for race. Thus, anthropologist Frank Livingstone's conclusion, that since clines cross racial boundaries, "there are no races, only clines".[93]

In a response to Livingstone, Theodore Dobzhansky argued that when talking about race one must be attentive to how the term is being used: "I agree with Dr. Livingstone that if races have to be 'discrete units', then there are no races, and if 'race' is used as an 'explanation' of the human variability, rather than vice versa, then the explanation is invalid." He further argued that one could use the term race if one distinguished between "race differences" and "the race concept". The former refers to any distinction in gene frequencies between populations; the latter is "a matter of judgment". He further observed that even when there is clinal variation, "Race differences are objectively ascertainable biological phenomena ... but it does not follow that racially distinct populations must be given racial (or subspecific) labels."[93] In short, Livingstone and Dobzhansky agree that there are genetic differences among human beings; they also agree that the use of the race concept to classify people, and how the race concept is used, is a matter of social convention. They differ on whether the race concept remains a meaningful and useful social convention.

 
 
Skin color (above) and blood type B (below) are nonconcordant traits since their geographical distribution is not similar.

In 1964, the biologists Paul Ehrlich and Holm pointed out cases where two or more clines are distributed discordantly – for example, melanin is distributed in a decreasing pattern from the equator north and south; frequencies for the haplotype for beta-S hemoglobin, on the other hand, radiate out of specific geographical points in Africa.[94] As the anthropologists Leonard Lieberman and Fatimah Linda Jackson observed, "Discordant patterns of heterogeneity falsify any description of a population as if it were genotypically or even phenotypically homogeneous".[88]

Patterns such as those seen in human physical and genetic variation as described above, have led to the consequence that the number and geographic location of any described races is highly dependent on the importance attributed to, and quantity of, the traits considered. A skin-lightening mutation, estimated to have occurred 20,000 to 50,000 years ago, partially accounts for the appearance of light skin in people who migrated out of Africa northward into what is now Europe. East Asians owe their relatively light skin to different mutations.[95] On the other hand, the greater the number of traits (or alleles) considered, the more subdivisions of humanity are detected, since traits and gene frequencies do not always correspond to the same geographical location. Or as Ossorio & Duster (2005) put it:

Anthropologists long ago discovered that humans' physical traits vary gradually, with groups that are close geographic neighbors being more similar than groups that are geographically separated. This pattern of variation, known as clinal variation, is also observed for many alleles that vary from one human group to another. Another observation is that traits or alleles that vary from one group to another do not vary at the same rate. This pattern is referred to as nonconcordant variation. Because the variation of physical traits is clinal and nonconcordant, anthropologists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries discovered that the more traits and the more human groups they measured, the fewer discrete differences they observed among races and the more categories they had to create to classify human beings. The number of races observed expanded to the 1930s and 1950s, and eventually anthropologists concluded that there were no discrete races.[96] Twentieth and 21st century biomedical researchers have discovered this same feature when evaluating human variation at the level of alleles and allele frequencies. Nature has not created four or five distinct, nonoverlapping genetic groups of people.

Genetically differentiated populations

Another way to look at differences between populations is to measure genetic differences rather than physical differences between groups. The mid-20th-century anthropologist William C. Boyd defined race as: "A population which differs significantly from other populations in regard to the frequency of one or more of the genes it possesses. It is an arbitrary matter which, and how many, gene loci we choose to consider as a significant 'constellation'".[97] Leonard Lieberman and Rodney Kirk have pointed out that "the paramount weakness of this statement is that if one gene can distinguish races then the number of races is as numerous as the number of human couples reproducing."[98] Moreover, the anthropologist Stephen Molnar has suggested that the discordance of clines inevitably results in a multiplication of races that renders the concept itself useless.[99] The Human Genome Project states "People who have lived in the same geographic region for many generations may have some alleles in common, but no allele will be found in all members of one population and in no members of any other."[100] Massimo Pigliucci and Jonathan Kaplan argue that human races do exist, and that they correspond to the genetic classification of ecotypes, but that real human races do not correspond very much, if at all, to folk racial categories.[101] In contrast, Walsh & Yun reviewed the literature in 2011 and reported that "Genetic studies using very few chromosomal loci find that genetic polymorphisms divide human populations into clusters with almost 100 percent accuracy and that they correspond to the traditional anthropological categories."[102]

Some biologists argue that racial categories correlate with biological traits (e.g. phenotype), and that certain genetic markers have varying frequencies among human populations, some of which correspond more or less to traditional racial groupings.[103]

Distribution of genetic variation

The distribution of genetic variants within and among human populations are impossible to describe succinctly because of the difficulty of defining a population, the clinal nature of variation, and heterogeneity across the genome (Long and Kittles 2003). In general, however, an average of 85% of statistical genetic variation exists within local populations, ≈7% is between local populations within the same continent, and ≈8% of variation occurs between large groups living on different continents.[104][105] The recent African origin theory for humans would predict that in Africa there exists a great deal more diversity than elsewhere and that diversity should decrease the further from Africa a population is sampled. Hence, the 85% average figure is misleading: Long and Kittles find that rather than 85% of human genetic diversity existing in all human populations, about 100% of human diversity exists in a single African population, whereas only about 60% of human genetic diversity exists in the least diverse population they analyzed (the Surui, a population derived from New Guinea).[106] Statistical analysis that takes this difference into account confirms previous findings that, "Western-based racial classifications have no taxonomic significance."[89]

Cluster analysis

A 2002 study of random biallelic genetic loci found little to no evidence that humans were divided into distinct biological groups.[107]

In his 2003 paper, "Human Genetic Diversity: Lewontin's Fallacy", A. W. F. Edwards argued that rather than using a locus-by-locus analysis of variation to derive taxonomy, it is possible to construct a human classification system based on characteristic genetic patterns, or clusters inferred from multilocus genetic data.[108][109] Geographically based human studies since have shown that such genetic clusters can be derived from analyzing of a large number of loci which can assort individuals sampled into groups analogous to traditional continental racial groups.[110][111] Joanna Mountain and Neil Risch cautioned that while genetic clusters may one day be shown to correspond to phenotypic variations between groups, such assumptions were premature as the relationship between genes and complex traits remains poorly understood.[112] However, Risch denied such limitations render the analysis useless: "Perhaps just using someone's actual birth year is not a very good way of measuring age. Does that mean we should throw it out? ... Any category you come up with is going to be imperfect, but that doesn't preclude you from using it or the fact that it has utility."[113]

Early human genetic cluster analysis studies were conducted with samples taken from ancestral population groups living at extreme geographic distances from each other. It was thought that such large geographic distances would maximize the genetic variation between the groups sampled in the analysis, and thus maximize the probability of finding cluster patterns unique to each group. In light of the historically recent acceleration of human migration (and correspondingly, human gene flow) on a global scale, further studies were conducted to judge the degree to which genetic cluster analysis can pattern ancestrally identified groups as well as geographically separated groups. One such study looked at a large multiethnic population in the United States, and "detected only modest genetic differentiation between different current geographic locales within each race/ethnicity group. Thus, ancient geographic ancestry, which is highly correlated with self-identified race/ethnicity – as opposed to current residence – is the major determinant of genetic structure in the U.S. population."[111]

Witherspoon et al. (2007) have argued that even when individuals can be reliably assigned to specific population groups, it may still be possible for two randomly chosen individuals from different populations/clusters to be more similar to each other than to a randomly chosen member of their own cluster. They found that many thousands of genetic markers had to be used in order for the answer to the question "How often is a pair of individuals from one population genetically more dissimilar than two individuals chosen from two different populations?" to be "never". This assumed three population groups separated by large geographic ranges (European, African and East Asian). The entire world population is much more complex and studying an increasing number of groups would require an increasing number of markers for the same answer. The authors conclude that "caution should be used when using geographic or genetic ancestry to make inferences about individual phenotypes."[114] Witherspoon, et al. concluded that, "The fact that, given enough genetic data, individuals can be correctly assigned to their populations of origin is compatible with the observation that most human genetic variation is found within populations, not between them. It is also compatible with our finding that, even when the most distinct populations are considered and hundreds of loci are used, individuals are frequently more similar to members of other populations than to members of their own population."[114]

Anthropologists such as C. Loring Brace,[115] the philosophers Jonathan Kaplan and Rasmus Winther,[116][117][118][119] and the geneticist Joseph Graves,[21] have argued that while there it is certainly possible to find biological and genetic variation that corresponds roughly to the groupings normally defined as "continental races", this is true for almost all geographically distinct populations. The cluster structure of the genetic data is therefore dependent on the initial hypotheses of the researcher and the populations sampled. When one samples continental groups, the clusters become continental; if one had chosen other sampling patterns, the clustering would be different. Weiss and Fullerton have noted that if one sampled only Icelanders, Mayans and Maoris, three distinct clusters would form and all other populations could be described as being clinally composed of admixtures of Maori, Icelandic and Mayan genetic materials.[120] Kaplan and Winther therefore argue that, seen in this way, both Lewontin and Edwards are right in their arguments. They conclude that while racial groups are characterized by different allele frequencies, this does not mean that racial classification is a natural taxonomy of the human species, because multiple other genetic patterns can be found in human populations that crosscut racial distinctions. Moreover, the genomic data underdetermines whether one wishes to see subdivisions (i.e., splitters) or a continuum (i.e., lumpers). Under Kaplan and Winther's view, racial groupings are objective social constructions (see Mills 1998[121]) that have conventional biological reality only insofar as the categories are chosen and constructed for pragmatic scientific reasons. In earlier work, Winther had identified "diversity partitioning" and "clustering analysis" as two separate methodologies, with distinct questions, assumptions, and protocols. Each is also associated with opposing ontological consequences vis-a-vis the metaphysics of race.[122] Philosopher Lisa Gannett has argued that biogeographical ancestry, a concept devised by Mark Shriver and Tony Frudakis, is not an objective measure of the biological aspects of race as Shriver and Frudakis claim it is. She argues that it is actually just a "local category shaped by the U.S. context of its production, especially the forensic aim of being able to predict the race or ethnicity of an unknown suspect based on DNA found at the crime scene."[123]

Clines and clusters in genetic variation

Recent studies of human genetic clustering have included a debate over how genetic variation is organized, with clusters and clines as the main possible orderings.Serre & Pääbo (2004) argued for smooth, clinal genetic variation in ancestral populations even in regions previously considered racially homogeneous, with the apparent gaps turning out to be artifacts of sampling techniques.Rosenberg et al. (2005) disputed this and offered an analysis of the Human Genetic Diversity Panel showing that there were small discontinuities in the smooth genetic variation for ancestral populations at the location of geographic barriers such as the Sahara, the Oceans, and the Himalayas. Nonetheless,Rosenberg et al. (2005) stated that their findings "should not be taken as evidence of our support of any particular concept of biological race... Genetic differences among human populations derive mainly from gradations in allele frequencies rather than from distinctive 'diagnostic' genotypes." Using a sample of 40 populations distributed roughly evenly across the Earth's land surface,Xing & et al. (2010, p. 208) found that "genetic diversity is distributed in a more clinal pattern when more geographically intermediate populations are sampled."

Guido Barbujani has written that human genetic variation is generally distributed continuously in gradients across much of Earth, and that there is no evidence that genetic boundaries between human populations exist as would be necessary for human races to exist.[124]

Over time, human genetic variation has formed a nested structure that is inconsistent with the concept of races that have evolved independently of one another.[125]

Social constructions

As anthropologists and other evolutionary scientists have shifted away from the language of race to the term population to talk about genetic differences, historians, cultural anthropologists and other social scientists re-conceptualized the term "race" as a cultural category or identity, i.e., a way among many possible ways in which a society chooses to divide its members into categories.

Many social scientists have replaced the word race with the word "ethnicity" to refer to self-identifying groups based on beliefs concerning shared culture, ancestry and history. Alongside empirical and conceptual problems with "race", following the Second World War, evolutionary and social scientists were acutely aware of how beliefs about race had been used to justify discrimination, apartheid, slavery, and genocide. This questioning gained momentum in the 1960s during the civil rights movement in the United States and the emergence of numerous anti-colonial movements worldwide. They thus came to believe that race itself is a social construct, a concept that was believed to correspond to an objective reality but which was believed in because of its social functions.[126]

Craig Venter and Francis Collins of the National Institute of Health jointly made the announcement of the mapping of the human genome in 2000. Upon examining the data from the genome mapping, Venter realized that although the genetic variation within the human species is on the order of 1–3% (instead of the previously assumed 1%), the types of variations do not support notion of genetically defined races. Venter said, "Race is a social concept. It's not a scientific one. There are no bright lines (that would stand out), if we could compare all the sequenced genomes of everyone on the planet." "When we try to apply science to try to sort out these social differences, it all falls apart."[127]

Anthropologist Stephan Palmié has argued that race "is not a thing but a social relation";[128] or, in the words of Katya Gibel Mevorach, "a metonym", "a human invention whose criteria for differentiation are neither universal nor fixed but have always been used to manage difference."[129] As such, the use of the term "race" itself must be analyzed. Moreover, they argue that biology will not explain why or how people use the idea of race; only history and social relationships will.

Imani Perry has argued that race "is produced by social arrangements and political decision making",[130] and that "race is something that happens, rather than something that is. It is dynamic, but it holds no objective truth."[131] Similarly, Racial Culture: A Critique (2005), Richard T. Ford argued that while "there is no necessary correspondence between the ascribed identity of race and one's culture or personal sense of self" and "group difference is not intrinsic to members of social groups but rather contingent o[n] the social practices of group identification", the social practices of identity politics may coerce individuals into the "compulsory" enactment of "prewritten racial scripts".[132]

Brazil

 
Portrait "Redenção de Cam" (1895), showing a Brazilian family becoming "whiter" each generation

Compared to 19th-century United States, 20th-century Brazil was characterized by a perceived relative absence of sharply defined racial groups. According to anthropologist Marvin Harris, this pattern reflects a different history and different social relations.

Race in Brazil was "biologized", but in a way that recognized the difference between ancestry (which determines genotype) and phenotypic differences. There, racial identity was not governed by rigid descent rule, such as the one-drop rule, as it was in the United States. A Brazilian child was never automatically identified with the racial type of one or both parents, nor were there only a very limited number of categories to choose from,[133] to the extent that full siblings can pertain to different racial groups.[134]

Self-reported ancestry of people from
Rio de Janeiro, by race or skin color (2000 survey)[135]
Ancestry brancos pardos negros
European only 48% 6%
African only 12% 25%
Amerindian only 2%
African and European 23% 34% 31%
Amerindian and European 14% 6%
African and Amerindian 4% 9%
African, Amerindian and European 15% 36% 35%
Total 100% 100% 100%
Any African 38% 86% 100%

Over a dozen racial categories would be recognized in conformity with all the possible combinations of hair color, hair texture, eye color, and skin color. These types grade into each other like the colors of the spectrum, and not one category stands significantly isolated from the rest. That is, race referred preferentially to appearance, not heredity, and appearance is a poor indication of ancestry, because only a few genes are responsible for someone's skin color and traits: a person who is considered white may have more African ancestry than a person who is considered black, and the reverse can be also true about European ancestry.[136] The complexity of racial classifications in Brazil reflects the extent of genetic mixing in Brazilian society, a society that remains highly, but not strictly, stratified along color lines. These socioeconomic factors are also significant to the limits of racial lines, because a minority of pardos, or brown people, are likely to start declaring themselves white or black if socially upward,[137] and being seen as relatively "whiter" as their perceived social status increases (much as in other regions of Latin America).[138]

Fluidity of racial categories aside, the "biologification" of race in Brazil referred above would match contemporary concepts of race in the United States quite closely, though, if Brazilians are supposed to choose their race as one among, Asian and Indigenous apart, three IBGE's census categories. While assimilated Amerindians and people with very high quantities of Amerindian ancestry are usually grouped as caboclos, a subgroup of pardos which roughly translates as both mestizo and hillbilly, for those of lower quantity of Amerindian descent a higher European genetic contribution is expected to be grouped as a pardo. In several genetic tests, people with less than 60-65% of European descent and 5–10% of Amerindian descent usually cluster with Afro-Brazilians (as reported by the individuals), or 6.9% of the population, and those with about 45% or more of Subsaharan contribution most times do so (in average, Afro-Brazilian DNA was reported to be about 50% Subsaharan African, 37% European and 13% Amerindian).[139][140][141][142]

Ethnic groups in Brazil (census data)[143]
Ethnic group white black multiracial
1872 3,787,289 1,954,452 4,188,737
1940 26,171,778 6,035,869 8,744,365
1991 75,704,927 7,335,136 62,316,064
Ethnic groups in Brazil (1872 and 1890)[144]
Years whites multiracial blacks Indians Total
1872 38.1% 38.3% 19.7% 3.9% 100%
1890 44.0% 32.4% 14.6% 9% 100%

If a more consistent report with the genetic groups in the gradation of genetic mixing is to be considered (e.g. that would not cluster people with a balanced degree of African and non-African ancestry in the black group instead of the multiracial one, unlike elsewhere in Latin America where people of high quantity of African descent tend to classify themselves as mixed), more people would report themselves as white and pardo in Brazil (47.7% and 42.4% of the population as of 2010, respectively), because by research its population is believed to have between 65 and 80% of autosomal European ancestry, in average (also >35% of European mt-DNA and >95% of European Y-DNA).[139][145][146][147]

From the last decades of the Empire until the 1950s, the proportion of the white population increased significantly while Brazil welcomed 5.5 million immigrants between 1821 and 1932, not much behind its neighbor Argentina with 6.4 million,[148] and it received more European immigrants in its colonial history than the United States. Between 1500 and 1760, 700.000 Europeans settled in Brazil, while 530.000 Europeans settled in the United States for the same given time.[149] Thus, the historical construction of race in Brazilian society dealt primarily with gradations between persons of majority European ancestry and little minority groups with otherwise lower quantity therefrom in recent times.

European Union

According to the Council of the European Union:

The European Union rejects theories which attempt to determine the existence of separate human races.

— Directive 2000/43/EC[150]

The European Union uses the terms racial origin and ethnic origin synonymously in its documents and according to it "the use of the term 'racial origin' in this directive does not imply an acceptance of such [racial] theories".[150][151][full citation needed] Haney López warns that using "race" as a category within the law tends to legitimize its existence in the popular imagination. In the diverse geographic context of Europe, ethnicity and ethnic origin are arguably more resonant and are less encumbered by the ideological baggage associated with "race". In European context, historical resonance of "race" underscores its problematic nature. In some states, it is strongly associated with laws promulgated by the Nazi and Fascist governments in Europe during the 1930s and 1940s. Indeed, in 1996, the European Parliament adopted a resolution stating that "the term should therefore be avoided in all official texts".[152]

The concept of racial origin relies on the notion that human beings can be separated into biologically distinct "races", an idea generally rejected by the scientific community. Since all human beings belong to the same species, the ECRI (European Commission against Racism and Intolerance) rejects theories based on the existence of different "races". However, in its Recommendation ECRI uses this term in order to ensure that those persons who are generally and erroneously perceived as belonging to "another race" are not excluded from the protection provided for by the legislation. The law claims to reject the existence of "race", yet penalize situations where someone is treated less favourably on this ground.[152]

United States

The immigrants to the United States came from every region of Europe, Africa, and Asia. They mixed among themselves and with the indigenous inhabitants of the continent. In the United States most people who self-identify as African American have some European ancestors, while many people who identify as European American have some African or Amerindian ancestors.

Since the early history of the United States, Amerindians, African Americans, and European Americans have been classified as belonging to different races. Efforts to track mixing between groups led to a proliferation of categories, such as mulatto and octoroon. The criteria for membership in these races diverged in the late 19th century. During the Reconstruction era, increasing numbers of Americans began to consider anyone with "one drop" of known "Black blood" to be Black, regardless of appearance. By the early 20th century, this notion was made statutory in many states. Amerindians continue to be defined by a certain percentage of "Indian blood" (called blood quantum). To be White one had to have perceived "pure" White ancestry. The one-drop rule or hypodescent rule refers to the convention of defining a person as racially black if he or she has any known African ancestry. This rule meant that those that were mixed race but with some discernible African ancestry were defined as black. The one-drop rule is specific to not only those with African ancestry but to the United States, making it a particularly African-American experience.[153]

The decennial censuses conducted since 1790 in the United States created an incentive to establish racial categories and fit people into these categories.[154]

The term "Hispanic" as an ethnonym emerged in the 20th century with the rise of migration of laborers from the Spanish-speaking countries of Latin America to the United States. Today, the word "Latino" is often used as a synonym for "Hispanic". The definitions of both terms are non-race specific, and include people who consider themselves to be of distinct races (Black, White, Amerindian, Asian, and mixed groups).[155] However, there is a common misconception in the US that Hispanic/Latino is a race[156] or sometimes even that national origins such as Mexican, Cuban, Colombian, Salvadoran, etc. are races. In contrast to "Latino" or "Hispanic", "Anglo" refers to non-Hispanic White Americans or non-Hispanic European Americans, most of whom speak the English language but are not necessarily of English descent.

Views across disciplines over time

Anthropology

The concept of race classification in physical anthropology lost credibility around the 1960s and is now considered untenable.[157][158][159] A 2019 statement by the American Association of Physical Anthropologists declares:

Race does not provide an accurate representation of human biological variation. It was never accurate in the past, and it remains inaccurate when referencing contemporary human populations. Humans are not divided biologically into distinct continental types or racial genetic clusters. Instead, the Western concept of race must be understood as a classification system that emerged from, and in support of, European colonialism, oppression, and discrimination.[84]

Wagner et al. (2017) surveyed 3,286 American anthropologists' views on race and genetics, including both cultural and biological anthropologists. They found a consensus among them that biological races do not exist in humans, but that race does exist insofar as the social experiences of members of different races can have significant effects on health.[160]

Wang, Štrkalj et al. (2003) examined the use of race as a biological concept in research papers published in China's only biological anthropology journal, Acta Anthropologica Sinica. The study showed that the race concept was widely used among Chinese anthropologists.[161][162] In a 2007 review paper, Štrkalj suggested that the stark contrast of the racial approach between the United States and China was due to the fact that race is a factor for social cohesion among the ethnically diverse people of China, whereas "race" is a very sensitive issue in America and the racial approach is considered to undermine social cohesion – with the result that in the socio-political context of US academics scientists are encouraged not to use racial categories, whereas in China they are encouraged to use them.[163]

Lieberman et al. in a 2004 study researched the acceptance of race as a concept among anthropologists in the United States, Canada, the Spanish speaking areas, Europe, Russia and China. Rejection of race ranged from high to low, with the highest rejection rate in the United States and Canada, a moderate rejection rate in Europe, and the lowest rejection rate in Russia and China. Methods used in the studies reported included questionnaires and content analysis.[20]

Kaszycka et al. (2009) in 2002–2003 surveyed European anthropologists' opinions toward the biological race concept. Three factors, country of academic education, discipline, and age, were found to be significant in differentiating the replies. Those educated in Western Europe, physical anthropologists, and middle-aged persons rejected race more frequently than those educated in Eastern Europe, people in other branches of science, and those from both younger and older generations." The survey shows that the views on race are sociopolitically (ideologically) influenced and highly dependent on education."[164]

United States

Since the second half of the 20th century, physical anthropology in the United States has moved away from a typological understanding of human biological diversity towards a genomic and population-based perspective. Anthropologists have tended to understand race as a social classification of humans based on phenotype and ancestry as well as cultural factors, as the concept is understood in the social sciences.[90][158] Since 1932, an increasing number of college textbooks introducing physical anthropology have rejected race as a valid concept: from 1932 to 1976, only seven out of thirty-two rejected race; from 1975 to 1984, thirteen out of thirty-three rejected race; from 1985 to 1993, thirteen out of nineteen rejected race. According to one academic journal entry, where 78 percent of the articles in the 1931 Journal of Physical Anthropology employed these or nearly synonymous terms reflecting a bio-race paradigm, only 36 percent did so in 1965, and just 28 percent did in 1996.[165]

A 1998 "Statement on 'Race'" composed by a select committee of anthropologists and issued by the executive board of the American Anthropological Association, which they argue "represents generally the contemporary thinking and scholarly positions of a majority of anthropologists", declares:[166]

In the United States both scholars and the general public have been conditioned to viewing human races as natural and separate divisions within the human species based on visible physical differences. With the vast expansion of scientific knowledge in this century, however, it has become clear that human populations are not unambiguous, clearly demarcated, biologically distinct groups. Evidence from the analysis of genetics (e.g., DNA) indicates that most physical variation, about 94%, lies within so-called racial groups. Conventional geographic "racial" groupings differ from one another only in about 6% of their genes. This means that there is greater variation within "racial" groups than between them. In neighboring populations there is much overlapping of genes and their phenotypic (physical) expressions. Throughout history whenever different groups have come into contact, they have interbred. The continued sharing of genetic materials has maintained all of humankind as a single species. [...] With the vast expansion of scientific knowledge in this century, ... it has become clear that human populations are not unambiguous, clearly demarcated, biologically distinct groups. [...] Given what we know about the capacity of normal humans to achieve and function within any culture, we conclude that present-day inequalities between so-called "racial" groups are not consequences of their biological inheritance but products of historical and contemporary social, economic, educational, and political circumstances.

An earlier survey, conducted in 1985 (Lieberman et al. 1992), asked 1,200 American scientists how many disagree with the following proposition: "There are biological races in the species Homo sapiens." Among anthropologists, the responses were:

Lieberman's study also showed that more women reject the concept of race than men.[168]

The same survey, conducted again in 1999,[169] showed that the number of anthropologists disagreeing with the idea of biological race had risen substantially. The results were as follows:

A line of research conducted by Cartmill (1998), however, seemed to limit the scope of Lieberman's finding that there was "a significant degree of change in the status of the race concept". Goran Štrkalj has argued that this may be because Lieberman and collaborators had looked at all the members of the American Anthropological Association irrespective of their field of research interest, while Cartmill had looked specifically at biological anthropologists interested in human variation.[170]

In 2007, Ann Morning interviewed over 40 American biologists and anthropologists and found significant disagreements over the nature of race, with no one viewpoint holding a majority among either group. Morning also argues that a third position, "antiessentialism", which holds that race is not a useful concept for biologists, should be introduced into this debate in addition to "constructionism" and "essentialism".[171]

According to the 2000 University of Wyoming edition of a popular physical anthropology textbook, forensic anthropologists are overwhelmingly in support of the idea of the basic biological reality of human races.[172] Forensic physical anthropologist and professor George W. Gill has said that the idea that race is only skin deep "is simply not true, as any experienced forensic anthropologist will affirm" and "Many morphological features tend to follow geographic boundaries coinciding often with climatic zones. This is not surprising since the selective forces of climate are probably the primary forces of nature that have shaped human races with regard not only to skin color and hair form but also the underlying bony structures of the nose, cheekbones, etc. (For example, more prominent noses humidify air better.)" While he can see good arguments for both sides, the complete denial of the opposing evidence "seems to stem largely from socio-political motivation and not science at all". He also states that many biological anthropologists see races as real yet "not one introductory textbook of physical anthropology even presents that perspective as a possibility. In a case as flagrant as this, we are not dealing with science but rather with blatant, politically motivated censorship".[172]

In partial response to Gill's statement, Professor of Biological Anthropology C. Loring Brace argues that the reason laymen and biological anthropologists can determine the geographic ancestry of an individual can be explained by the fact that biological characteristics are clinally distributed across the planet, and that does not translate into the concept of race. He states:

Well, you may ask, why can't we call those regional patterns "races"? In fact, we can and do, but it does not make them coherent biological entities. "Races" defined in such a way are products of our perceptions. ... We realize that in the extremes of our transit – Moscow to Nairobi, perhaps – there is a major but gradual change in skin color from what we euphemistically call white to black, and that this is related to the latitudinal difference in the intensity of the ultraviolet component of sunlight. What we do not see, however, is the myriad other traits that are distributed in a fashion quite unrelated to the intensity of ultraviolet radiation. Where skin color is concerned, all the northern populations of the Old World are lighter than the long-term inhabitants near the equator. Although Europeans and Chinese are obviously different, in skin color they are closer to each other than either is to equatorial Africans. But if we test the distribution of the widely known ABO blood-group system, then Europeans and Africans are closer to each other than either is to Chinese.[173]

The concept of "race" is still sometimes used within forensic anthropology (when analyzing skeletal remains), biomedical research, and race-based medicine.[174][175] Brace has criticized forensic anthropologists for this, arguing that they in fact should be talking about regional ancestry. He argues that while forensic anthropologists can determine that a skeletal remain comes from a person with ancestors in a specific region of Africa, categorizing that skeletal as being "black" is a socially constructed category that is only meaningful in the particular social context of the United States, and which is not itself scientifically valid.[176]

Biology, anatomy, and medicine

In the same 1985 survey (Lieberman et al. 1992), 16% of the surveyed biologists and 36% of the surveyed developmental psychologists disagreed with the proposition: "There are biological races in the species Homo sapiens."

The authors of the study also examined 77 college textbooks in biology and 69 in physical anthropology published between 1932 and 1989. Physical anthropology texts argued that biological races exist until the 1970s, when they began to argue that races do not exist. In contrast, biology textbooks did not undergo such a reversal but many instead dropped their discussion of race altogether. The authors attributed this to biologists trying to avoid discussing the political implications of racial classifications, and to the ongoing discussions in biology about the validity of the idea of "subspecies". The authors concluded, "The concept of race, masking the overwhelming genetic similarity of all peoples and the mosaic patterns of variation that do not correspond to racial divisions, is not only socially dysfunctional but is biologically indefensible as well (pp. 5 18–5 19)."(Lieberman et al. 1992, pp. 316–17)

A 1994 examination of 32 English sport/exercise science textbooks found that 7 (21.9%) claimed that there are biophysical differences due to race that might explain differences in sports performance, 24 (75%) did not mention nor refute the concept, and 1 (3.1%) expressed caution with the idea.[177]

In February 2001, the editors of Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine asked "authors to not use race and ethnicity when there is no biological, scientific, or sociological reason for doing so."[178] The editors also stated that "analysis by race and ethnicity has become an analytical knee-jerk reflex."[179] Nature Genetics now ask authors to "explain why they make use of particular ethnic groups or populations, and how classification was achieved."[180]

Morning (2008) looked at high school biology textbooks during the 1952–2002 period and initially found a similar pattern with only 35% directly discussing race in the 1983–92 period from initially 92% doing so. However, this has increased somewhat after this to 43%. More indirect and brief discussions of race in the context of medical disorders have increased from none to 93% of textbooks. In general, the material on race has moved from surface traits to genetics and evolutionary history. The study argues that the textbooks' fundamental message about the existence of races has changed little.[181]

Surveying views on race in the scientific community in 2008, Morning concluded that biologists had failed to come to a clear consensus, and they often split along cultural and demographic lines. She notes, "At best, one can conclude that biologists and anthropologists now appear equally divided in their beliefs about the nature of race."[171]

Gissis (2008) examined several important American and British journals in genetics, epidemiology and medicine for their content during the 1946–2003 period. He wrote that "Based upon my findings I argue that the category of race only seemingly disappeared from scientific discourse after World War II and has had a fluctuating yet continuous use during the time span from 1946 to 2003, and has even become more pronounced from the early 1970s on".[182]

33 health services researchers from differing geographic regions were interviewed in a 2008 study. The researchers recognized the problems with racial and ethnic variables but the majority still believed these variables were necessary and useful.[183]

A 2010 examination of 18 widely used English anatomy textbooks found that they all represented human biological variation in superficial and outdated ways, many of them making use of the race concept in ways that were current in 1950s anthropology. The authors recommended that anatomical education should describe human anatomical variation in more detail and rely on newer research that demonstrates the inadequacies of simple racial typologies.[184]

A 2021 study that examined over 11,000 papers from 1949 to 2018 in the American Journal of Human Genetics, found that "race" was used in only 5% of papers published in the last decade, down from 22% in the first. Together with an increase in use of the terms "ethnicity," "ancestry," and location-based terms, it suggests that human geneticists have mostly abandoned the term "race."[185]

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM), supported by the US the National Institutes of Health, formally declared that "researchers should not use race as a proxy for describing human genetic variation."[186] The report of its Committee on the Use of Race, Ethnicity, and Ancestry as Population Descriptors in Genomics Research titled Using Population Descriptors in Genetics and Genomics Research was released on 14 March 2023.[187][26] The committee co-chair Charmaine D. Royal and Robert O. Keohane of the Duke University concurred in the meeting: "Classifying people by race is a practice entangled with and rooted in racism."[186]

Sociology

Lester Frank Ward (1841–1913), considered to be one of the founders of American sociology, rejected notions that there were fundamental differences that distinguished one race from another, although he acknowledged that social conditions differed dramatically by race.[188] At the turn of the 20th century, sociologists viewed the concept of race in ways that were shaped by the scientific racism of the 19th and early 20th centuries.[189] Many sociologists focused on African Americans, called Negroes at that time, and claimed that they were inferior to whites. White sociologist Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860–1935), for example, used biological arguments to claim the inferiority of African Americans.[189] American sociologist Charles H. Cooley (1864–1929) theorized that differences among races were "natural," and that biological differences result in differences in intellectual abilities[190][188] Edward Alsworth Ross (1866–1951), also an important figure in the founding of American sociology, and a eugenicist, believed that whites were the superior race, and that there were essential differences in "temperament" among races.[188] In 1910, the Journal published an article by Ulysses G. Weatherly (1865–1940) that called for white supremacy and segregation of the races to protect racial purity.[188]

W. E. B. Du Bois (1868–1963), one of the first African-American sociologists, was the first sociologist to use sociological concepts and empirical research methods to analyze race as a social construct instead of a biological reality.[189] Beginning in 1899 with his book The Philadelphia Negro, Du Bois studied and wrote about race and racism throughout his career. In his work, he contended that social class, colonialism, and capitalism shaped ideas about race and racial categories. Social scientists largely abandoned scientific racism and biological reasons for racial categorization schemes by the 1930s.[191] Other early sociologists, especially those associated with the Chicago School, joined Du Bois in theorizing race as a socially constructed fact.[191] By 1978, William Julius Wilson argued that race and racial classification systems were declining in significance, and that instead, social class more accurately described what sociologists had earlier understood as race.[192] By 1986, sociologists Michael Omi and Howard Winant successfully introduced the concept of racial formation to describe the process by which racial categories are created.[193] Omi and Winant assert that "there is no biological basis for distinguishing among human groups along the lines of race."[193]

Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Sociology professor at Duke University, remarks,[194] "I contend that racism is, more than anything else, a matter of group power; it is about a dominant racial group (whites) striving to maintain its systemic advantages and minorities fighting to subvert the racial status quo."[195] The types of practices that take place under this new color-blind racism is subtle, institutionalized, and supposedly not racial. Color-blind racism thrives on the idea that race is no longer an issue in the United States.[195] There are contradictions between the alleged color-blindness of most whites and the persistence of a color-coded system of inequality.[citation needed]

Today, sociologists generally understand race and racial categories as socially constructed, and reject racial categorization schemes that depend on biological differences.[191]

Political and practical uses

Biomedicine

In the United States, federal government policy promotes the use of racially categorized data to identify and address health disparities between racial or ethnic groups.[196] In clinical settings, race has sometimes been considered in the diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions. Doctors have noted that some medical conditions are more prevalent in certain racial or ethnic groups than in others, without being sure of the cause of those differences. Recent interest in race-based medicine, or race-targeted pharmacogenomics, has been fueled by the proliferation of human genetic data which followed the decoding of the human genome in the first decade of the twenty-first century. There is an active debate among biomedical researchers about the meaning and importance of race in their research. Proponents of the use of racial categories in biomedicine argue that continued use of racial categorizations in biomedical research and clinical practice makes possible the application of new genetic findings, and provides a clue to diagnosis.[197][198] Biomedical researchers' positions on race fall into two main camps: those who consider the concept of race to have no biological basis and those who consider it to have the potential to be biologically meaningful. Members of the latter camp often base their arguments around the potential to create genome-based personalized medicine.[199]

Other researchers point out that finding a difference in disease prevalence between two socially defined groups does not necessarily imply genetic causation of the difference.[200][201] They suggest that medical practices should maintain their focus on the individual rather than an individual's membership to any group.[202] They argue that overemphasizing genetic contributions to health disparities carries various risks such as reinforcing stereotypes, promoting racism or ignoring the contribution of non-genetic factors to health disparities.[203] International epidemiological data show that living conditions rather than race make the biggest difference in health outcomes even for diseases that have "race-specific" treatments.[204] Some studies have found that patients are reluctant to accept racial categorization in medical practice.[198]

Law enforcement

In an attempt to provide general descriptions that may facilitate the job of law enforcement officers seeking to apprehend suspects, the United States FBI employs the term "race" to summarize the general appearance (skin color, hair texture, eye shape, and other such easily noticed characteristics) of individuals whom they are attempting to apprehend. From the perspective of law enforcement officers, it is generally more important to arrive at a description that will readily suggest the general appearance of an individual than to make a scientifically valid categorization by DNA or other such means. Thus, in addition to assigning a wanted individual to a racial category, such a description will include: height, weight, eye color, scars and other distinguishing characteristics.

Criminal justice agencies in England and Wales use at least two separate racial/ethnic classification systems when reporting crime, as of 2010. One is the system used in the 2001 Census when individuals identify themselves as belonging to a particular ethnic group: W1 (White-British), W2 (White-Irish), W9 (Any other white background); M1 (White and black Caribbean), M2 (White and black African), M3 (White and Asian), M9 (Any other mixed background); A1 (Asian-Indian), A2 (Asian-Pakistani), A3 (Asian-Bangladeshi), A9 (Any other Asian background); B1 (Black Caribbean), B2 (Black African), B3 (Any other black background); O1 (Chinese), O9 (Any other). The other is categories used by the police when they visually identify someone as belonging to an ethnic group, e.g. at the time of a stop and search or an arrest: White – North European (IC1), White – South European (IC2), Black (IC3), Asian (IC4), Chinese, Japanese, or South East Asian (IC5), Middle Eastern (IC6), and Unknown (IC0). "IC" stands for "Identification Code;" these items are also referred to as Phoenix classifications.[205] Officers are instructed to "record the response that has been given" even if the person gives an answer which may be incorrect; their own perception of the person's ethnic background is recorded separately.[206] Comparability of the information being recorded by officers was brought into question by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) in September 2007, as part of its Equality Data Review; one problem cited was the number of reports that contained an ethnicity of "Not Stated."[207]

In many countries, such as France, the state is legally banned from maintaining data based on race.[208]

In the United States, the practice of racial profiling has been ruled to be both unconstitutional and a violation of civil rights. There is active debate regarding the cause of a marked correlation between the recorded crimes, punishments meted out, and the country's populations. Many consider de facto racial profiling an example of institutional racism in law enforcement.[209]

Mass incarceration in the United States disproportionately impacts African American and Latino communities. Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (2010), argues that mass incarceration is best understood as not only a system of overcrowded prisons. Mass incarceration is also, "the larger web of laws, rules, policies, and customs that control those labeled criminals both in and out of prison."[210] She defines it further as "a system that locks people not only behind actual bars in actual prisons, but also behind virtual bars and virtual walls", illustrating the second-class citizenship that is imposed on a disproportionate number of people of color, specifically African-Americans. She compares mass incarceration to Jim Crow laws, stating that both work as racial caste systems.[211]

Many research findings appear to agree that the impact of victim race in the interpersonal violence (IPV) arrest decision might include a racial bias in favor of white victims. A 2011 study in a national sample of IPV arrests found that female arrest was more likely if the male victim was white and the female offender was black, while male arrest was more likely if the female victim was white. For both female and male arrest in IPV cases, situations involving married couples were more likely to lead to arrest compared to dating or divorced couples. More research is needed to understand agency and community factors that influence police behavior and how discrepancies in IPV interventions/ tools of justice can be addressed.[212]

Recent work using DNA cluster analysis to determine race background has been used by some criminal investigators to narrow their search for the identity of both suspects and victims.[213] Proponents of DNA profiling in criminal investigations cite cases where leads based on DNA analysis proved useful, but the practice remains controversial among medical ethicists, defense lawyers and some in law enforcement.[214]

The Constitution of Australia contains a line about 'people of any race for whom it is deemed necessary to make special laws', despite there being no agreed definition of race described in the document.

Forensic anthropology

Similarly, forensic anthropologists draw on highly heritable morphological features of human remains (e.g. cranial measurements) to aid in the identification of the body, including in terms of race. In a 1992 article, anthropologist Norman Sauer noted that anthropologists had generally abandoned the concept of race as a valid representation of human biological diversity, except for forensic anthropologists. He asked, "If races don't exist, why are forensic anthropologists so good at identifying them?"[159] He concluded:

[T]he successful assignment of race to a skeletal specimen is not a vindication of the race concept, but rather a prediction that an individual, while alive was assigned to a particular socially constructed "racial" category. A specimen may display features that point to African ancestry. In this country that person is likely to have been labeled Black regardless of whether or not such a race actually exists in nature.[159]

Identification of the ancestry of an individual is dependent upon knowledge of the frequency and distribution of phenotypic traits in a population. This does not necessitate the use of a racial classification scheme based on unrelated traits, although the race concept is widely used in medical and legal contexts in the United States.[215] Some studies have reported that races can be identified with a high degree of accuracy using certain methods, such as that developed by Giles and Elliot. However, this method sometimes fails to be replicated in other times and places; for instance, when the method was re-tested to identify Native Americans, the average rate of accuracy dropped from 85% to 33%.[76] Prior information about the individual (e.g. Census data) is also important in allowing the accurate identification of the individual's "race".[216]

In a different approach, anthropologist C. Loring Brace said:

The simple answer is that, as members of the society that poses the question, they are inculcated into the social conventions that determine the expected answer. They should also be aware of the biological inaccuracies contained in that "politically correct" answer. Skeletal analysis provides no direct assessment of skin color, but it does allow an accurate estimate of original geographical origins. African, eastern Asian, and European ancestry can be specified with a high degree of accuracy. Africa of course entails "black", but "black" does not entail African.[217]

In association with a NOVA program in 2000 about race, he wrote an essay opposing use of the term.[218]

A 2002 study found that about 13% of human craniometric variation existed between regions, while 6% existed between local populations within regions and 81% within local populations. In contrast, the opposite pattern of genetic variation was observed for skin color (which is often used to define race), with 88% of variation between regions. The study concluded that "The apportionment of genetic diversity in skin color is atypical, and cannot be used for purposes of classification."[219] Similarly, a 2009 study found that craniometrics could be used accurately to determine what part of the world someone was from based on their cranium; however, this study also found that there were no abrupt boundaries that separated craniometric variation into distinct racial groups.[220] Another 2009 study showed that American blacks and whites had different skeletal morphologies, and that significant patterning in variation in these traits exists within continents. This suggests that classifying humans into races based on skeletal characteristics would necessitate many different "races" being defined.[221]

In 2010, philosopher Neven Sesardic argued that when several traits are analyzed at the same time, forensic anthropologists can classify a person's race with an accuracy of close to 100% based on only skeletal remains.[222] Sesardic's claim has been disputed by philosopher Massimo Pigliucci, who accused Sesardic of "cherry pick[ing] the scientific evidence and reach[ing] conclusions that are contradicted by it." Specifically, Pigliucci argued that Sesardic misrepresented a paper by Ousley et al. (2009), and neglected to mention that they identified differentiation not just between individuals from different races, but also between individuals from different tribes, local environments, and time periods.[223]

See also

References

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    • Brace 2000a
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    • Lee 1997: "The very naturalness of 'reality' is itself the effect of a particular set of discursive constructions. In this way, discourse does not simply reflect reality, but actually participates in its construction"
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Further reading

  • Amadon, D. (1949). "The seventy-five percent rule for subspecies". Condor. 51 (6): 250–58. doi:10.2307/1364805. JSTOR 1364805. S2CID 87016263.
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  • Anemone, Robert L. (2011). Race and Human Diversity: A Biocultural Approach. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-131-83876-5.
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  • Graves, Joseph L. (2006). "What We Know and What We Don't Know: Human Genetic Variation and the Social Construction of Race". Is Race "Real"?. Social Science Research Council. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
  • Hawks, John (2013). "Significance of Neandertal and Denisovan Genomes in Human Evolution". Annual Review of Anthropology. Annual Reviews. 42 (1): 433–449. doi:10.1146/annurev-anthro-092412-155548. ISBN 978-0-8243-1942-7. ISSN 0084-6570.
  • Helms, Janet E.; Jernigan, Maryam; Mascher, Jackquelyn (2005). "The meaning of race in psychology and how to change it: A methodological perspective". American Psychologist. 60 (1): 27–36. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.60.1.27. PMID 15641919. S2CID 1676488.
  • Hooton, Earnest A. (22 January 1926). "Methods of Racial Analysis". Science. 63 (1621): 75–81. Bibcode:1926Sci....63...75H. doi:10.1126/science.63.1621.75. PMID 17774966.
  • James, Michael (28 May 2008). "Race". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2017 ed.).
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  • "UNESCO and Its Programme: The Race Question" (PDF). Paris: UNESCO. 1950. Publication 791.
race, human, categorization, this, article, about, categorization, human, populations, human, race, human, race, categorization, humans, based, shared, physical, social, qualities, into, groups, generally, viewed, distinct, within, given, society, term, came, . This article is about categorization of human populations For the human race see Human Race is a categorization of humans based on shared physical or social qualities into groups generally viewed as distinct within a given society 1 The term came into common usage during the 16th century when it was used to refer to groups of various kinds including those characterized by close kinship relations 2 By the 17th century the term began to refer to physical phenotypical traits and then later to national affiliations Modern science regards race as a social construct an identity which is assigned based on rules made by society 3 4 While partly based on physical similarities within groups race does not have an inherent physical or biological meaning 1 5 6 The concept of race is foundational to racism the belief that humans can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another Social conceptions and groupings of races have varied over time often involving folk taxonomies that define essential types of individuals based on perceived traits 7 Today scientists consider such biological essentialism obsolete 8 and generally discourage racial explanations for collective differentiation in both physical and behavioral traits 9 10 11 12 13 Even though there is a broad scientific agreement that essentialist and typological conceptions of race are untenable 14 15 16 17 18 19 scientists around the world continue to conceptualize race in widely differing ways 20 While some researchers continue to use the concept of race to make distinctions among fuzzy sets of traits or observable differences in behavior others in the scientific community suggest that the idea of race is inherently naive 9 or simplistic 21 Still others argue that among humans race has no taxonomic significance because all living humans belong to the same subspecies Homo sapiens sapiens 22 23 Since the second half of the 20th century race has been associated with discredited theories of scientific racism and has become increasingly seen as a largely pseudoscientific system of classification Although still used in general contexts race has often been replaced by less ambiguous and or loaded terms populations people s ethnic groups or communities depending on context 24 25 Its use in genetics was formally renounced by the US National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine in 2023 26 Contents 1 Defining race 2 Historical origins of racial classification 2 1 Colonialism 2 2 Early taxonomic models 2 3 Polygenism vs monogenism 3 Modern scholarship 3 1 Models of human evolution 3 2 Biological classification 3 2 1 Subspecies 3 2 2 Ancestrally differentiated populations clades 3 2 3 Clines 3 2 4 Genetically differentiated populations 3 2 4 1 Distribution of genetic variation 3 2 4 2 Cluster analysis 3 2 4 3 Clines and clusters in genetic variation 3 3 Social constructions 3 3 1 Brazil 3 3 2 European Union 3 3 3 United States 4 Views across disciplines over time 4 1 Anthropology 4 1 1 United States 4 2 Biology anatomy and medicine 4 3 Sociology 5 Political and practical uses 5 1 Biomedicine 5 2 Law enforcement 5 2 1 Forensic anthropology 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 9 1 Popular press 10 External links 10 1 Official statementsDefining raceModern scholarship views racial categories as socially constructed that is race is not intrinsic to human beings but rather an identity created often by socially dominant groups to establish meaning in a social context Different cultures define different racial groups often focused on the largest groups of social relevance and these definitions can change over time In South Africa the Population Registration Act 1950 recognized only White Black and Coloured with Indians added later 27 The government of Myanmar recognizes eight major national ethnic races The Brazilian census classifies people into brancos Whites pardos multiracial pretos Blacks amarelos Asians and indigenous see Race and ethnicity in Brazil though many people use different terms to identify themselves The United States Census Bureau proposed but then withdrew plans to add a new category to classify Middle Eastern and North African peoples in the 2020 U S census over a dispute over whether this classification should be considered a white ethnicity or a separate race 28 Legal definitions of whiteness in the United States used before the civil rights movement were often challenged for specific groups Historical race concepts have included a wide variety of schemes to divide local or worldwide populations into races and sub races The establishment of racial boundaries often involves the subjugation of groups defined as racially inferior as in the one drop rule used in the 19th century United States to exclude those with any amount of African ancestry from the dominant racial grouping defined as white 1 Such racial identities reflect the cultural attitudes of imperial powers dominant during the age of European colonial expansion 5 This view rejects the notion that race is biologically defined 29 30 31 32 According to geneticist David Reich while race may be a social construct differences in genetic ancestry that happen to correlate to many of today s racial constructs are real 33 In response to Reich a group of 67 scientists from a broad range of disciplines wrote that his concept of race was flawed as the meaning and significance of the groups is produced through social interventions 34 Although commonalities in physical traits such as facial features skin color and hair texture comprise part of the race concept this linkage is a social distinction rather than an inherently biological one 1 Other dimensions of racial groupings include shared history traditions and language For instance African American English is a language spoken by many African Americans especially in areas of the United States where racial segregation exists Furthermore people often self identify as members of a race for political reasons 1 When people define and talk about a particular conception of race they create a social reality through which social categorization is achieved 35 In this sense races are said to be social constructs 36 These constructs develop within various legal economic and sociopolitical contexts and may be the effect rather than the cause of major social situations clarify 37 While race is understood to be a social construct by many most scholars agree that race has real material effects in the lives of people through institutionalized practices of preference and discrimination citation needed Socioeconomic factors in combination with early but enduring views of race have led to considerable suffering within disadvantaged racial groups 38 Racial discrimination often coincides with racist mindsets whereby the individuals and ideologies of one group come to perceive the members of an outgroup as both racially defined and morally inferior 39 As a result racial groups possessing relatively little power often find themselves excluded or oppressed while hegemonic individuals and institutions are charged with holding racist attitudes 40 Racism has led to many instances of tragedy including slavery and genocide 41 In some countries law enforcement uses race to profile suspects This use of racial categories is frequently criticized for perpetuating an outmoded understanding of human biological variation and promoting stereotypes Because in some societies racial groupings correspond closely with patterns of social stratification for social scientists studying social inequality race can be a significant variable As sociological factors racial categories may in part reflect subjective attributions self identities and social institutions 42 43 Scholars continue to debate the degrees to which racial categories are biologically warranted and socially constructed 44 For example in 2008 John Hartigan Jr argued for a view of race that focused primarily on culture but which does not ignore the potential relevance of biology or genetics 45 Accordingly the racial paradigms employed in different disciplines vary in their emphasis on biological reduction as contrasted with societal construction In the social sciences theoretical frameworks such as racial formation theory and critical race theory investigate implications of race as social construction by exploring how the images ideas and assumptions of race are expressed in everyday life A large body of scholarship has traced the relationships between the historical social production of race in legal and criminal language and their effects on the policing and disproportionate incarceration of certain groups Historical origins of racial classificationSee also Historical race concepts and Scientific racism The three great races according to Meyers Konversations Lexikon of 1885 90 The subtypes are Mongoloid race shown in yellow and orange tonesCaucasoid race in light and medium grayish spring green cyan tonesNegroid race in brown tonesDravidians and Sinhalese in olive green and their classification is described as uncertain The Mongoloid race sees the widest geographic distribution including all of the Americas North Asia East Asia Southeast Asia and the entire inhabited Arctic as well as most of Central Asia and the Pacific Islands Groups of humans have always identified themselves as distinct from neighboring groups but such differences have not always been understood to be natural immutable and global These features are the distinguishing features of how the concept of race is used today In this way the idea of race as we understand it today came about during the historical process of exploration and conquest which brought Europeans into contact with groups from different continents and of the ideology of classification and typology found in the natural sciences 46 The term race was often used in a general biological taxonomic sense 24 starting from the 19th century to denote genetically differentiated human populations defined by phenotype 47 48 The modern concept of race emerged as a product of the colonial enterprises of European powers from the 16th to 18th centuries which identified race in terms of skin color and physical differences Author Rebecca F Kennedy argues that the Greeks and Romans would have found such concepts confusing in relation to their own systems of classification 49 According to Bancel et al the epistemological moment where the modern concept of race was invented and rationalized lies somewhere between 1730 and 1790 50 Colonialism According to Smedley and Marks the European concept of race along with many of the ideas now associated with the term arose at the time of the scientific revolution which introduced and privileged the study of natural kinds and the age of European imperialism and colonization which established political relations between Europeans and peoples with distinct cultural and political traditions 46 51 As Europeans encountered people from different parts of the world they speculated about the physical social and cultural differences among various human groups The rise of the Atlantic slave trade which gradually displaced an earlier trade in slaves from throughout the world created a further incentive to categorize human groups in order to justify the subordination of African slaves 52 Drawing on sources from classical antiquity and upon their own internal interactions for example the hostility between the English and Irish powerfully influenced early European thinking about the differences between people 53 Europeans began to sort themselves and others into groups based on physical appearance and to attribute to individuals belonging to these groups behaviors and capacities which were claimed to be deeply ingrained A set of folk beliefs took hold that linked inherited physical differences between groups to inherited intellectual behavioral and moral qualities 54 Similar ideas can be found in other cultures 55 for example in China where a concept often translated as race was associated with supposed common descent from the Yellow Emperor and used to stress the unity of ethnic groups in China Brutal conflicts between ethnic groups have existed throughout history and across the world 56 Early taxonomic models The first post Graeco Roman published classification of humans into distinct races seems to be Francois Bernier s Nouvelle division de la terre par les differents especes ou races qui l habitent New division of Earth by the different species or races which inhabit it published in 1684 57 In the 18th century the differences among human groups became a focus of scientific investigation But the scientific classification of phenotypic variation was frequently coupled with racist ideas about innate predispositions of different groups always attributing the most desirable features to the White European race and arranging the other races along a continuum of progressively undesirable attributes The 1735 classification of Carl Linnaeus inventor of zoological taxonomy divided the human species Homo sapiens into continental varieties of europaeus asiaticus americanus and afer each associated with a different humour sanguine melancholic choleric and phlegmatic respectively 58 59 Homo sapiens europaeus was described as active acute and adventurous whereas Homo sapiens afer was said to be crafty lazy and careless 60 The 1775 treatise The Natural Varieties of Mankind by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach proposed five major divisions the Caucasoid race the Mongoloid race the Ethiopian race later termed Negroid the American Indian race and the Malayan race but he did not propose any hierarchy among the races 60 Blumenbach also noted the graded transition in appearances from one group to adjacent groups and suggested that one variety of mankind does so sensibly pass into the other that you cannot mark out the limits between them 61 From the 17th through 19th centuries the merging of folk beliefs about group differences with scientific explanations of those differences produced what Smedley has called an ideology of race 51 According to this ideology races are primordial natural enduring and distinct It was further argued that some groups may be the result of mixture between formerly distinct populations but that careful study could distinguish the ancestral races that had combined to produce admixed groups 56 Subsequent influential classifications by Georges Buffon Petrus Camper and Christoph Meiners all classified Negros as inferior to Europeans 60 In the United States the racial theories of Thomas Jefferson were influential He saw Africans as inferior to Whites especially in regards to their intellect and imbued with unnatural sexual appetites but described Native Americans as equals to whites 62 Polygenism vs monogenism In the last two decades of the 18th century the theory of polygenism the belief that different races had evolved separately in each continent and shared no common ancestor 63 was advocated in England by historian Edward Long and anatomist Charles White in Germany by ethnographers Christoph Meiners and Georg Forster and in France by Julien Joseph Virey In the US Samuel George Morton Josiah Nott and Louis Agassiz promoted this theory in the mid 19th century Polygenism was popular and most widespread in the 19th century culminating in the founding of the Anthropological Society of London 1863 which during the period of the American Civil War broke away from the Ethnological Society of London and its monogenic stance their underlined difference lying relevantly in the so called Negro question a substantial racist view by the former 64 and a more liberal view on race by the latter 65 Modern scholarshipModels of human evolution See also Multiregional hypothesis and Recent single origin hypothesis Today all humans are classified as belonging to the species Homo sapiens However this is not the first species of homininae the first species of genus Homo Homo habilis evolved in East Africa at least 2 million years ago and members of this species populated different parts of Africa in a relatively short time Homo erectus evolved more than 1 8 million years ago and by 1 5 million years ago had spread throughout Europe and Asia Virtually all physical anthropologists agree that Archaic Homo sapiens A group including the possible species H heidelbergensis H rhodesiensis and H neanderthalensis evolved out of African Homo erectus sensu lato or Homo ergaster 66 67 Anthropologists support the idea that anatomically modern humans Homo sapiens evolved in North or East Africa from an archaic human species such as H heidelbergensis and then migrated out of Africa mixing with and replacing H heidelbergensis and H neanderthalensis populations throughout Europe and Asia and H rhodesiensis populations in Sub Saharan Africa a combination of the Out of Africa and Multiregional models 68 verification needed Biological classification Further information Race biology Species Subspecies Systematics Phylogenetics and Cladistics In the early 20th century many anthropologists taught that race was an entirely biological phenomenon and that this was core to a person s behavior and identity a position commonly called racial essentialism 69 This coupled with a belief that linguistic cultural and social groups fundamentally existed along racial lines formed the basis of what is now called scientific racism 70 After the Nazi eugenics program along with the rise of anti colonial movements racial essentialism lost widespread popularity 71 New studies of culture and the fledgling field of population genetics undermined the scientific standing of racial essentialism leading race anthropologists to revise their conclusions about the sources of phenotypic variation 69 A significant number of modern anthropologists and biologists in the West came to view race as an invalid genetic or biological designation 72 The first to challenge the concept of race on empirical grounds were the anthropologists Franz Boas who provided evidence of phenotypic plasticity due to environmental factors 73 and Ashley Montagu who relied on evidence from genetics 74 E O Wilson then challenged the concept from the perspective of general animal systematics and further rejected the claim that races were equivalent to subspecies 75 Human genetic variation is predominantly within races continuous and complex in structure which is inconsistent with the concept of genetic human races 76 According to the biological anthropologist Jonathan Marks 46 By the 1970s it had become clear that 1 most human differences were cultural 2 what was not cultural was principally polymorphic that is to say found in diverse groups of people at different frequencies 3 what was not cultural or polymorphic was principally clinal that is to say gradually variable over geography and 4 what was left the component of human diversity that was not cultural polymorphic or clinal was very small A consensus consequently developed among anthropologists and geneticists that race as the previous generation had known it as largely discrete geographically distinct gene pools did not exist Subspecies The term race in biology is used with caution because it can be ambiguous Generally when it is used it is effectively a synonym of subspecies 77 For animals the only taxonomic unit below the species level is usually the subspecies 78 there are narrower infraspecific ranks in botany and race does not correspond directly with any of them Traditionally subspecies are seen as geographically isolated and genetically differentiated populations 79 Studies of human genetic variation show that human populations are not geographically isolated 80 and their genetic differences are far smaller than those among comparable subspecies 81 In 1978 Sewall Wright suggested that human populations that have long inhabited separated parts of the world should in general be considered different subspecies by the criterion that most individuals of such populations can be allocated correctly by inspection Wright argued that It does not require a trained anthropologist to classify an array of Englishmen West Africans and Chinese with 100 accuracy by features skin color and type of hair despite so much variability within each of these groups that every individual can easily be distinguished from every other 82 While in practice subspecies are often defined by easily observable physical appearance there is not necessarily any evolutionary significance to these observed differences so this form of classification has become less acceptable to evolutionary biologists 83 Likewise this typological approach to race is generally regarded as discredited by biologists and anthropologists 84 16 Ancestrally differentiated populations clades In 2000 philosopher Robin Andreasen proposed that cladistics might be used to categorize human races biologically and that races can be both biologically real and socially constructed 85 Andreasen cited tree diagrams of relative genetic distances among populations published by Luigi Cavalli Sforza as the basis for a phylogenetic tree of human races p 661 Biological anthropologist Jonathan Marks 2008 responded by arguing that Andreasen had misinterpreted the genetic literature These trees are phenetic based on similarity rather than cladistic based on monophyletic descent that is from a series of unique ancestors 86 Evolutionary biologist Alan Templeton 2013 argued that multiple lines of evidence falsify the idea of a phylogenetic tree structure to human genetic diversity and confirm the presence of gene flow among populations 32 Marks Templeton and Cavalli Sforza all conclude that genetics does not provide evidence of human races 32 87 Previously anthropologists Lieberman and Jackson 1995 had also critiqued the use of cladistics to support concepts of race They argued that the molecular and biochemical proponents of this model explicitly use racial categories in their initial grouping of samples For example the large and highly diverse macroethnic groups of East Indians North Africans and Europeans are presumptively grouped as Caucasians prior to the analysis of their DNA variation They argued that this a priori grouping limits and skews interpretations obscures other lineage relationships deemphasizes the impact of more immediate clinal environmental factors on genomic diversity and can cloud our understanding of the true patterns of affinity 88 In 2015 Keith Hunley Graciela Cabana and Jeffrey Long analyzed the Human Genome Diversity Project sample of 1 037 individuals in 52 populations 89 finding that diversity among non African populations is the result of a serial founder effect process with non African populations as a whole nested among African populations that some African populations are equally related to other African populations and to non African populations and that outside of Africa regional groupings of populations are nested inside one another and many of them are not monophyletic 89 Earlier research had also suggested that there has always been considerable gene flow between human populations meaning that human population groups are not monophyletic 79 Rachel Caspari has argued that since no groups currently regarded as races are monophyletic by definition none of these groups can be clades 90 ClinesOne crucial innovation in reconceptualizing genotypic and phenotypic variation was the anthropologist C Loring Brace s observation that such variations insofar as it is affected by natural selection slow migration or genetic drift are distributed along geographic gradations or clines 91 For example with respect to skin color in Europe and Africa Brace writes To this day skin color grades by imperceptible means from Europe southward around the eastern end of the Mediterranean and up the Nile into Africa From one end of this range to the other there is no hint of a skin color boundary and yet the spectrum runs from the lightest in the world at the northern edge to as dark as it is possible for humans to be at the equator 92 In part this is due to isolation by distance This point called attention to a problem common to phenotype based descriptions of races for example those based on hair texture and skin color they ignore a host of other similarities and differences for example blood type that do not correlate highly with the markers for race Thus anthropologist Frank Livingstone s conclusion that since clines cross racial boundaries there are no races only clines 93 In a response to Livingstone Theodore Dobzhansky argued that when talking about race one must be attentive to how the term is being used I agree with Dr Livingstone that if races have to be discrete units then there are no races and if race is used as an explanation of the human variability rather than vice versa then the explanation is invalid He further argued that one could use the term race if one distinguished between race differences and the race concept The former refers to any distinction in gene frequencies between populations the latter is a matter of judgment He further observed that even when there is clinal variation Race differences are objectively ascertainable biological phenomena but it does not follow that racially distinct populations must be given racial or subspecific labels 93 In short Livingstone and Dobzhansky agree that there are genetic differences among human beings they also agree that the use of the race concept to classify people and how the race concept is used is a matter of social convention They differ on whether the race concept remains a meaningful and useful social convention Skin color above and blood type B below are nonconcordant traits since their geographical distribution is not similar In 1964 the biologists Paul Ehrlich and Holm pointed out cases where two or more clines are distributed discordantly for example melanin is distributed in a decreasing pattern from the equator north and south frequencies for the haplotype for beta S hemoglobin on the other hand radiate out of specific geographical points in Africa 94 As the anthropologists Leonard Lieberman and Fatimah Linda Jackson observed Discordant patterns of heterogeneity falsify any description of a population as if it were genotypically or even phenotypically homogeneous 88 Patterns such as those seen in human physical and genetic variation as described above have led to the consequence that the number and geographic location of any described races is highly dependent on the importance attributed to and quantity of the traits considered A skin lightening mutation estimated to have occurred 20 000 to 50 000 years ago partially accounts for the appearance of light skin in people who migrated out of Africa northward into what is now Europe East Asians owe their relatively light skin to different mutations 95 On the other hand the greater the number of traits or alleles considered the more subdivisions of humanity are detected since traits and gene frequencies do not always correspond to the same geographical location Or as Ossorio amp Duster 2005 put it Anthropologists long ago discovered that humans physical traits vary gradually with groups that are close geographic neighbors being more similar than groups that are geographically separated This pattern of variation known as clinal variation is also observed for many alleles that vary from one human group to another Another observation is that traits or alleles that vary from one group to another do not vary at the same rate This pattern is referred to as nonconcordant variation Because the variation of physical traits is clinal and nonconcordant anthropologists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries discovered that the more traits and the more human groups they measured the fewer discrete differences they observed among races and the more categories they had to create to classify human beings The number of races observed expanded to the 1930s and 1950s and eventually anthropologists concluded that there were no discrete races 96 Twentieth and 21st century biomedical researchers have discovered this same feature when evaluating human variation at the level of alleles and allele frequencies Nature has not created four or five distinct nonoverlapping genetic groups of people Genetically differentiated populations Main articles Race and genetics and Human genetic variation Another way to look at differences between populations is to measure genetic differences rather than physical differences between groups The mid 20th century anthropologist William C Boyd defined race as A population which differs significantly from other populations in regard to the frequency of one or more of the genes it possesses It is an arbitrary matter which and how many gene loci we choose to consider as a significant constellation 97 Leonard Lieberman and Rodney Kirk have pointed out that the paramount weakness of this statement is that if one gene can distinguish races then the number of races is as numerous as the number of human couples reproducing 98 Moreover the anthropologist Stephen Molnar has suggested that the discordance of clines inevitably results in a multiplication of races that renders the concept itself useless 99 The Human Genome Project states People who have lived in the same geographic region for many generations may have some alleles in common but no allele will be found in all members of one population and in no members of any other 100 Massimo Pigliucci and Jonathan Kaplan argue that human races do exist and that they correspond to the genetic classification of ecotypes but that real human races do not correspond very much if at all to folk racial categories 101 In contrast Walsh amp Yun reviewed the literature in 2011 and reported that Genetic studies using very few chromosomal loci find that genetic polymorphisms divide human populations into clusters with almost 100 percent accuracy and that they correspond to the traditional anthropological categories 102 Some biologists argue that racial categories correlate with biological traits e g phenotype and that certain genetic markers have varying frequencies among human populations some of which correspond more or less to traditional racial groupings 103 Distribution of genetic variation The distribution of genetic variants within and among human populations are impossible to describe succinctly because of the difficulty of defining a population the clinal nature of variation and heterogeneity across the genome Long and Kittles 2003 In general however an average of 85 of statistical genetic variation exists within local populations 7 is between local populations within the same continent and 8 of variation occurs between large groups living on different continents 104 105 The recent African origin theory for humans would predict that in Africa there exists a great deal more diversity than elsewhere and that diversity should decrease the further from Africa a population is sampled Hence the 85 average figure is misleading Long and Kittles find that rather than 85 of human genetic diversity existing in all human populations about 100 of human diversity exists in a single African population whereas only about 60 of human genetic diversity exists in the least diverse population they analyzed the Surui a population derived from New Guinea 106 Statistical analysis that takes this difference into account confirms previous findings that Western based racial classifications have no taxonomic significance 89 Cluster analysis A 2002 study of random biallelic genetic loci found little to no evidence that humans were divided into distinct biological groups 107 In his 2003 paper Human Genetic Diversity Lewontin s Fallacy A W F Edwards argued that rather than using a locus by locus analysis of variation to derive taxonomy it is possible to construct a human classification system based on characteristic genetic patterns or clusters inferred from multilocus genetic data 108 109 Geographically based human studies since have shown that such genetic clusters can be derived from analyzing of a large number of loci which can assort individuals sampled into groups analogous to traditional continental racial groups 110 111 Joanna Mountain and Neil Risch cautioned that while genetic clusters may one day be shown to correspond to phenotypic variations between groups such assumptions were premature as the relationship between genes and complex traits remains poorly understood 112 However Risch denied such limitations render the analysis useless Perhaps just using someone s actual birth year is not a very good way of measuring age Does that mean we should throw it out Any category you come up with is going to be imperfect but that doesn t preclude you from using it or the fact that it has utility 113 Early human genetic cluster analysis studies were conducted with samples taken from ancestral population groups living at extreme geographic distances from each other It was thought that such large geographic distances would maximize the genetic variation between the groups sampled in the analysis and thus maximize the probability of finding cluster patterns unique to each group In light of the historically recent acceleration of human migration and correspondingly human gene flow on a global scale further studies were conducted to judge the degree to which genetic cluster analysis can pattern ancestrally identified groups as well as geographically separated groups One such study looked at a large multiethnic population in the United States and detected only modest genetic differentiation between different current geographic locales within each race ethnicity group Thus ancient geographic ancestry which is highly correlated with self identified race ethnicity as opposed to current residence is the major determinant of genetic structure in the U S population 111 Witherspoon et al 2007 have argued that even when individuals can be reliably assigned to specific population groups it may still be possible for two randomly chosen individuals from different populations clusters to be more similar to each other than to a randomly chosen member of their own cluster They found that many thousands of genetic markers had to be used in order for the answer to the question How often is a pair of individuals from one population genetically more dissimilar than two individuals chosen from two different populations to be never This assumed three population groups separated by large geographic ranges European African and East Asian The entire world population is much more complex and studying an increasing number of groups would require an increasing number of markers for the same answer The authors conclude that caution should be used when using geographic or genetic ancestry to make inferences about individual phenotypes 114 Witherspoon et al concluded that The fact that given enough genetic data individuals can be correctly assigned to their populations of origin is compatible with the observation that most human genetic variation is found within populations not between them It is also compatible with our finding that even when the most distinct populations are considered and hundreds of loci are used individuals are frequently more similar to members of other populations than to members of their own population 114 Anthropologists such as C Loring Brace 115 the philosophers Jonathan Kaplan and Rasmus Winther 116 117 118 119 and the geneticist Joseph Graves 21 have argued that while there it is certainly possible to find biological and genetic variation that corresponds roughly to the groupings normally defined as continental races this is true for almost all geographically distinct populations The cluster structure of the genetic data is therefore dependent on the initial hypotheses of the researcher and the populations sampled When one samples continental groups the clusters become continental if one had chosen other sampling patterns the clustering would be different Weiss and Fullerton have noted that if one sampled only Icelanders Mayans and Maoris three distinct clusters would form and all other populations could be described as being clinally composed of admixtures of Maori Icelandic and Mayan genetic materials 120 Kaplan and Winther therefore argue that seen in this way both Lewontin and Edwards are right in their arguments They conclude that while racial groups are characterized by different allele frequencies this does not mean that racial classification is a natural taxonomy of the human species because multiple other genetic patterns can be found in human populations that crosscut racial distinctions Moreover the genomic data underdetermines whether one wishes to see subdivisions i e splitters or a continuum i e lumpers Under Kaplan and Winther s view racial groupings are objective social constructions see Mills 1998 121 that have conventional biological reality only insofar as the categories are chosen and constructed for pragmatic scientific reasons In earlier work Winther had identified diversity partitioning and clustering analysis as two separate methodologies with distinct questions assumptions and protocols Each is also associated with opposing ontological consequences vis a vis the metaphysics of race 122 Philosopher Lisa Gannett has argued that biogeographical ancestry a concept devised by Mark Shriver and Tony Frudakis is not an objective measure of the biological aspects of race as Shriver and Frudakis claim it is She argues that it is actually just a local category shaped by the U S context of its production especially the forensic aim of being able to predict the race or ethnicity of an unknown suspect based on DNA found at the crime scene 123 Clines and clusters in genetic variation Recent studies of human genetic clustering have included a debate over how genetic variation is organized with clusters and clines as the main possible orderings Serre amp Paabo 2004 argued for smooth clinal genetic variation in ancestral populations even in regions previously considered racially homogeneous with the apparent gaps turning out to be artifacts of sampling techniques Rosenberg et al 2005 disputed this and offered an analysis of the Human Genetic Diversity Panel showing that there were small discontinuities in the smooth genetic variation for ancestral populations at the location of geographic barriers such as the Sahara the Oceans and the Himalayas Nonetheless Rosenberg et al 2005 stated that their findings should not be taken as evidence of our support of any particular concept of biological race Genetic differences among human populations derive mainly from gradations in allele frequencies rather than from distinctive diagnostic genotypes Using a sample of 40 populations distributed roughly evenly across the Earth s land surface Xing amp et al 2010 p 208 found that genetic diversity is distributed in a more clinal pattern when more geographically intermediate populations are sampled Guido Barbujani has written that human genetic variation is generally distributed continuously in gradients across much of Earth and that there is no evidence that genetic boundaries between human populations exist as would be necessary for human races to exist 124 Over time human genetic variation has formed a nested structure that is inconsistent with the concept of races that have evolved independently of one another 125 Social constructions Main article Race and society As anthropologists and other evolutionary scientists have shifted away from the language of race to the term population to talk about genetic differences historians cultural anthropologists and other social scientists re conceptualized the term race as a cultural category or identity i e a way among many possible ways in which a society chooses to divide its members into categories Many social scientists have replaced the word race with the word ethnicity to refer to self identifying groups based on beliefs concerning shared culture ancestry and history Alongside empirical and conceptual problems with race following the Second World War evolutionary and social scientists were acutely aware of how beliefs about race had been used to justify discrimination apartheid slavery and genocide This questioning gained momentum in the 1960s during the civil rights movement in the United States and the emergence of numerous anti colonial movements worldwide They thus came to believe that race itself is a social construct a concept that was believed to correspond to an objective reality but which was believed in because of its social functions 126 Craig Venter and Francis Collins of the National Institute of Health jointly made the announcement of the mapping of the human genome in 2000 Upon examining the data from the genome mapping Venter realized that although the genetic variation within the human species is on the order of 1 3 instead of the previously assumed 1 the types of variations do not support notion of genetically defined races Venter said Race is a social concept It s not a scientific one There are no bright lines that would stand out if we could compare all the sequenced genomes of everyone on the planet When we try to apply science to try to sort out these social differences it all falls apart 127 Anthropologist Stephan Palmie has argued that race is not a thing but a social relation 128 or in the words of Katya Gibel Mevorach a metonym a human invention whose criteria for differentiation are neither universal nor fixed but have always been used to manage difference 129 As such the use of the term race itself must be analyzed Moreover they argue that biology will not explain why or how people use the idea of race only history and social relationships will Imani Perry has argued that race is produced by social arrangements and political decision making 130 and that race is something that happens rather than something that is It is dynamic but it holds no objective truth 131 Similarly Racial Culture A Critique 2005 Richard T Ford argued that while there is no necessary correspondence between the ascribed identity of race and one s culture or personal sense of self and group difference is not intrinsic to members of social groups but rather contingent o n the social practices of group identification the social practices of identity politics may coerce individuals into the compulsory enactment of prewritten racial scripts 132 Brazil Main article Race in Brazil Portrait Redencao de Cam 1895 showing a Brazilian family becoming whiter each generation Compared to 19th century United States 20th century Brazil was characterized by a perceived relative absence of sharply defined racial groups According to anthropologist Marvin Harris this pattern reflects a different history and different social relations Race in Brazil was biologized but in a way that recognized the difference between ancestry which determines genotype and phenotypic differences There racial identity was not governed by rigid descent rule such as the one drop rule as it was in the United States A Brazilian child was never automatically identified with the racial type of one or both parents nor were there only a very limited number of categories to choose from 133 to the extent that full siblings can pertain to different racial groups 134 Self reported ancestry of people fromRio de Janeiro by race or skin color 2000 survey 135 Ancestry brancos pardos negrosEuropean only 48 6 African only 12 25 Amerindian only 2 African and European 23 34 31 Amerindian and European 14 6 African and Amerindian 4 9 African Amerindian and European 15 36 35 Total 100 100 100 Any African 38 86 100 Over a dozen racial categories would be recognized in conformity with all the possible combinations of hair color hair texture eye color and skin color These types grade into each other like the colors of the spectrum and not one category stands significantly isolated from the rest That is race referred preferentially to appearance not heredity and appearance is a poor indication of ancestry because only a few genes are responsible for someone s skin color and traits a person who is considered white may have more African ancestry than a person who is considered black and the reverse can be also true about European ancestry 136 The complexity of racial classifications in Brazil reflects the extent of genetic mixing in Brazilian society a society that remains highly but not strictly stratified along color lines These socioeconomic factors are also significant to the limits of racial lines because a minority of pardos or brown people are likely to start declaring themselves white or black if socially upward 137 and being seen as relatively whiter as their perceived social status increases much as in other regions of Latin America 138 Fluidity of racial categories aside the biologification of race in Brazil referred above would match contemporary concepts of race in the United States quite closely though if Brazilians are supposed to choose their race as one among Asian and Indigenous apart three IBGE s census categories While assimilated Amerindians and people with very high quantities of Amerindian ancestry are usually grouped as caboclos a subgroup of pardos which roughly translates as both mestizo and hillbilly for those of lower quantity of Amerindian descent a higher European genetic contribution is expected to be grouped as a pardo In several genetic tests people with less than 60 65 of European descent and 5 10 of Amerindian descent usually cluster with Afro Brazilians as reported by the individuals or 6 9 of the population and those with about 45 or more of Subsaharan contribution most times do so in average Afro Brazilian DNA was reported to be about 50 Subsaharan African 37 European and 13 Amerindian 139 140 141 142 Ethnic groups in Brazil census data 143 Ethnic group white black multiracial1872 3 787 289 1 954 452 4 188 7371940 26 171 778 6 035 869 8 744 3651991 75 704 927 7 335 136 62 316 064Ethnic groups in Brazil 1872 and 1890 144 Years whites multiracial blacks Indians Total1872 38 1 38 3 19 7 3 9 100 1890 44 0 32 4 14 6 9 100 If a more consistent report with the genetic groups in the gradation of genetic mixing is to be considered e g that would not cluster people with a balanced degree of African and non African ancestry in the black group instead of the multiracial one unlike elsewhere in Latin America where people of high quantity of African descent tend to classify themselves as mixed more people would report themselves as white and pardo in Brazil 47 7 and 42 4 of the population as of 2010 respectively because by research its population is believed to have between 65 and 80 of autosomal European ancestry in average also gt 35 of European mt DNA and gt 95 of European Y DNA 139 145 146 147 From the last decades of the Empire until the 1950s the proportion of the white population increased significantly while Brazil welcomed 5 5 million immigrants between 1821 and 1932 not much behind its neighbor Argentina with 6 4 million 148 and it received more European immigrants in its colonial history than the United States Between 1500 and 1760 700 000 Europeans settled in Brazil while 530 000 Europeans settled in the United States for the same given time 149 Thus the historical construction of race in Brazilian society dealt primarily with gradations between persons of majority European ancestry and little minority groups with otherwise lower quantity therefrom in recent times European Union According to the Council of the European Union The European Union rejects theories which attempt to determine the existence of separate human races Directive 2000 43 EC 150 The European Union uses the terms racial origin and ethnic origin synonymously in its documents and according to it the use of the term racial origin in this directive does not imply an acceptance of such racial theories 150 151 full citation needed Haney Lopez warns that using race as a category within the law tends to legitimize its existence in the popular imagination In the diverse geographic context of Europe ethnicity and ethnic origin are arguably more resonant and are less encumbered by the ideological baggage associated with race In European context historical resonance of race underscores its problematic nature In some states it is strongly associated with laws promulgated by the Nazi and Fascist governments in Europe during the 1930s and 1940s Indeed in 1996 the European Parliament adopted a resolution stating that the term should therefore be avoided in all official texts 152 The concept of racial origin relies on the notion that human beings can be separated into biologically distinct races an idea generally rejected by the scientific community Since all human beings belong to the same species the ECRI European Commission against Racism and Intolerance rejects theories based on the existence of different races However in its Recommendation ECRI uses this term in order to ensure that those persons who are generally and erroneously perceived as belonging to another race are not excluded from the protection provided for by the legislation The law claims to reject the existence of race yet penalize situations where someone is treated less favourably on this ground 152 United States Main article Race and ethnicity in the United States See also Miscegenation Admixture in the United States and Historical racial and ethnic demographics of the United States The immigrants to the United States came from every region of Europe Africa and Asia They mixed among themselves and with the indigenous inhabitants of the continent In the United States most people who self identify as African American have some European ancestors while many people who identify as European American have some African or Amerindian ancestors Since the early history of the United States Amerindians African Americans and European Americans have been classified as belonging to different races Efforts to track mixing between groups led to a proliferation of categories such as mulatto and octoroon The criteria for membership in these races diverged in the late 19th century During the Reconstruction era increasing numbers of Americans began to consider anyone with one drop of known Black blood to be Black regardless of appearance By the early 20th century this notion was made statutory in many states Amerindians continue to be defined by a certain percentage of Indian blood called blood quantum To be White one had to have perceived pure White ancestry The one drop rule or hypodescent rule refers to the convention of defining a person as racially black if he or she has any known African ancestry This rule meant that those that were mixed race but with some discernible African ancestry were defined as black The one drop rule is specific to not only those with African ancestry but to the United States making it a particularly African American experience 153 The decennial censuses conducted since 1790 in the United States created an incentive to establish racial categories and fit people into these categories 154 The term Hispanic as an ethnonym emerged in the 20th century with the rise of migration of laborers from the Spanish speaking countries of Latin America to the United States Today the word Latino is often used as a synonym for Hispanic The definitions of both terms are non race specific and include people who consider themselves to be of distinct races Black White Amerindian Asian and mixed groups 155 However there is a common misconception in the US that Hispanic Latino is a race 156 or sometimes even that national origins such as Mexican Cuban Colombian Salvadoran etc are races In contrast to Latino or Hispanic Anglo refers to non Hispanic White Americans or non Hispanic European Americans most of whom speak the English language but are not necessarily of English descent Views across disciplines over timeAnthropologyThe concept of race classification in physical anthropology lost credibility around the 1960s and is now considered untenable 157 158 159 A 2019 statement by the American Association of Physical Anthropologists declares Race does not provide an accurate representation of human biological variation It was never accurate in the past and it remains inaccurate when referencing contemporary human populations Humans are not divided biologically into distinct continental types or racial genetic clusters Instead the Western concept of race must be understood as a classification system that emerged from and in support of European colonialism oppression and discrimination 84 Wagner et al 2017 surveyed 3 286 American anthropologists views on race and genetics including both cultural and biological anthropologists They found a consensus among them that biological races do not exist in humans but that race does exist insofar as the social experiences of members of different races can have significant effects on health 160 Wang Strkalj et al 2003 examined the use of race as a biological concept in research papers published in China s only biological anthropology journal Acta Anthropologica Sinica The study showed that the race concept was widely used among Chinese anthropologists 161 162 In a 2007 review paper Strkalj suggested that the stark contrast of the racial approach between the United States and China was due to the fact that race is a factor for social cohesion among the ethnically diverse people of China whereas race is a very sensitive issue in America and the racial approach is considered to undermine social cohesion with the result that in the socio political context of US academics scientists are encouraged not to use racial categories whereas in China they are encouraged to use them 163 Lieberman et al in a 2004 study researched the acceptance of race as a concept among anthropologists in the United States Canada the Spanish speaking areas Europe Russia and China Rejection of race ranged from high to low with the highest rejection rate in the United States and Canada a moderate rejection rate in Europe and the lowest rejection rate in Russia and China Methods used in the studies reported included questionnaires and content analysis 20 Kaszycka et al 2009 in 2002 2003 surveyed European anthropologists opinions toward the biological race concept Three factors country of academic education discipline and age were found to be significant in differentiating the replies Those educated in Western Europe physical anthropologists and middle aged persons rejected race more frequently than those educated in Eastern Europe people in other branches of science and those from both younger and older generations The survey shows that the views on race are sociopolitically ideologically influenced and highly dependent on education 164 United States Since the second half of the 20th century physical anthropology in the United States has moved away from a typological understanding of human biological diversity towards a genomic and population based perspective Anthropologists have tended to understand race as a social classification of humans based on phenotype and ancestry as well as cultural factors as the concept is understood in the social sciences 90 158 Since 1932 an increasing number of college textbooks introducing physical anthropology have rejected race as a valid concept from 1932 to 1976 only seven out of thirty two rejected race from 1975 to 1984 thirteen out of thirty three rejected race from 1985 to 1993 thirteen out of nineteen rejected race According to one academic journal entry where 78 percent of the articles in the 1931 Journal of Physical Anthropology employed these or nearly synonymous terms reflecting a bio race paradigm only 36 percent did so in 1965 and just 28 percent did in 1996 165 A 1998 Statement on Race composed by a select committee of anthropologists and issued by the executive board of the American Anthropological Association which they argue represents generally the contemporary thinking and scholarly positions of a majority of anthropologists declares 166 In the United States both scholars and the general public have been conditioned to viewing human races as natural and separate divisions within the human species based on visible physical differences With the vast expansion of scientific knowledge in this century however it has become clear that human populations are not unambiguous clearly demarcated biologically distinct groups Evidence from the analysis of genetics e g DNA indicates that most physical variation about 94 lies within so called racial groups Conventional geographic racial groupings differ from one another only in about 6 of their genes This means that there is greater variation within racial groups than between them In neighboring populations there is much overlapping of genes and their phenotypic physical expressions Throughout history whenever different groups have come into contact they have interbred The continued sharing of genetic materials has maintained all of humankind as a single species With the vast expansion of scientific knowledge in this century it has become clear that human populations are not unambiguous clearly demarcated biologically distinct groups Given what we know about the capacity of normal humans to achieve and function within any culture we conclude that present day inequalities between so called racial groups are not consequences of their biological inheritance but products of historical and contemporary social economic educational and political circumstances An earlier survey conducted in 1985 Lieberman et al 1992 asked 1 200 American scientists how many disagree with the following proposition There are biological races in the species Homo sapiens Among anthropologists the responses were physical anthropologists 41 cultural anthropologists 53 167 Lieberman s study also showed that more women reject the concept of race than men 168 The same survey conducted again in 1999 169 showed that the number of anthropologists disagreeing with the idea of biological race had risen substantially The results were as follows physical anthropologists 69 cultural anthropologists 80 A line of research conducted by Cartmill 1998 however seemed to limit the scope of Lieberman s finding that there was a significant degree of change in the status of the race concept Goran Strkalj has argued that this may be because Lieberman and collaborators had looked at all the members of the American Anthropological Association irrespective of their field of research interest while Cartmill had looked specifically at biological anthropologists interested in human variation 170 In 2007 Ann Morning interviewed over 40 American biologists and anthropologists and found significant disagreements over the nature of race with no one viewpoint holding a majority among either group Morning also argues that a third position antiessentialism which holds that race is not a useful concept for biologists should be introduced into this debate in addition to constructionism and essentialism 171 According to the 2000 University of Wyoming edition of a popular physical anthropology textbook forensic anthropologists are overwhelmingly in support of the idea of the basic biological reality of human races 172 Forensic physical anthropologist and professor George W Gill has said that the idea that race is only skin deep is simply not true as any experienced forensic anthropologist will affirm and Many morphological features tend to follow geographic boundaries coinciding often with climatic zones This is not surprising since the selective forces of climate are probably the primary forces of nature that have shaped human races with regard not only to skin color and hair form but also the underlying bony structures of the nose cheekbones etc For example more prominent noses humidify air better While he can see good arguments for both sides the complete denial of the opposing evidence seems to stem largely from socio political motivation and not science at all He also states that many biological anthropologists see races as real yet not one introductory textbook of physical anthropology even presents that perspective as a possibility In a case as flagrant as this we are not dealing with science but rather with blatant politically motivated censorship 172 In partial response to Gill s statement Professor of Biological Anthropology C Loring Brace argues that the reason laymen and biological anthropologists can determine the geographic ancestry of an individual can be explained by the fact that biological characteristics are clinally distributed across the planet and that does not translate into the concept of race He states Well you may ask why can t we call those regional patterns races In fact we can and do but it does not make them coherent biological entities Races defined in such a way are products of our perceptions We realize that in the extremes of our transit Moscow to Nairobi perhaps there is a major but gradual change in skin color from what we euphemistically call white to black and that this is related to the latitudinal difference in the intensity of the ultraviolet component of sunlight What we do not see however is the myriad other traits that are distributed in a fashion quite unrelated to the intensity of ultraviolet radiation Where skin color is concerned all the northern populations of the Old World are lighter than the long term inhabitants near the equator Although Europeans and Chinese are obviously different in skin color they are closer to each other than either is to equatorial Africans But if we test the distribution of the widely known ABO blood group system then Europeans and Africans are closer to each other than either is to Chinese 173 The concept of race is still sometimes used within forensic anthropology when analyzing skeletal remains biomedical research and race based medicine 174 175 Brace has criticized forensic anthropologists for this arguing that they in fact should be talking about regional ancestry He argues that while forensic anthropologists can determine that a skeletal remain comes from a person with ancestors in a specific region of Africa categorizing that skeletal as being black is a socially constructed category that is only meaningful in the particular social context of the United States and which is not itself scientifically valid 176 Biology anatomy and medicine In the same 1985 survey Lieberman et al 1992 16 of the surveyed biologists and 36 of the surveyed developmental psychologists disagreed with the proposition There are biological races in the species Homo sapiens The authors of the study also examined 77 college textbooks in biology and 69 in physical anthropology published between 1932 and 1989 Physical anthropology texts argued that biological races exist until the 1970s when they began to argue that races do not exist In contrast biology textbooks did not undergo such a reversal but many instead dropped their discussion of race altogether The authors attributed this to biologists trying to avoid discussing the political implications of racial classifications and to the ongoing discussions in biology about the validity of the idea of subspecies The authors concluded The concept of race masking the overwhelming genetic similarity of all peoples and the mosaic patterns of variation that do not correspond to racial divisions is not only socially dysfunctional but is biologically indefensible as well pp 5 18 5 19 Lieberman et al 1992 pp 316 17 A 1994 examination of 32 English sport exercise science textbooks found that 7 21 9 claimed that there are biophysical differences due to race that might explain differences in sports performance 24 75 did not mention nor refute the concept and 1 3 1 expressed caution with the idea 177 In February 2001 the editors of Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine asked authors to not use race and ethnicity when there is no biological scientific or sociological reason for doing so 178 The editors also stated that analysis by race and ethnicity has become an analytical knee jerk reflex 179 Nature Genetics now ask authors to explain why they make use of particular ethnic groups or populations and how classification was achieved 180 Morning 2008 looked at high school biology textbooks during the 1952 2002 period and initially found a similar pattern with only 35 directly discussing race in the 1983 92 period from initially 92 doing so However this has increased somewhat after this to 43 More indirect and brief discussions of race in the context of medical disorders have increased from none to 93 of textbooks In general the material on race has moved from surface traits to genetics and evolutionary history The study argues that the textbooks fundamental message about the existence of races has changed little 181 Surveying views on race in the scientific community in 2008 Morning concluded that biologists had failed to come to a clear consensus and they often split along cultural and demographic lines She notes At best one can conclude that biologists and anthropologists now appear equally divided in their beliefs about the nature of race 171 Gissis 2008 examined several important American and British journals in genetics epidemiology and medicine for their content during the 1946 2003 period He wrote that Based upon my findings I argue that the category of race only seemingly disappeared from scientific discourse after World War II and has had a fluctuating yet continuous use during the time span from 1946 to 2003 and has even become more pronounced from the early 1970s on 182 33 health services researchers from differing geographic regions were interviewed in a 2008 study The researchers recognized the problems with racial and ethnic variables but the majority still believed these variables were necessary and useful 183 A 2010 examination of 18 widely used English anatomy textbooks found that they all represented human biological variation in superficial and outdated ways many of them making use of the race concept in ways that were current in 1950s anthropology The authors recommended that anatomical education should describe human anatomical variation in more detail and rely on newer research that demonstrates the inadequacies of simple racial typologies 184 A 2021 study that examined over 11 000 papers from 1949 to 2018 in the American Journal of Human Genetics found that race was used in only 5 of papers published in the last decade down from 22 in the first Together with an increase in use of the terms ethnicity ancestry and location based terms it suggests that human geneticists have mostly abandoned the term race 185 The National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine NASEM supported by the US the National Institutes of Health formally declared that researchers should not use race as a proxy for describing human genetic variation 186 The report of its Committee on the Use of Race Ethnicity and Ancestry as Population Descriptors in Genomics Research titled Using Population Descriptors in Genetics and Genomics Research was released on 14 March 2023 187 26 The committee co chair Charmaine D Royal and Robert O Keohane of the Duke University concurred in the meeting Classifying people by race is a practice entangled with and rooted in racism 186 Sociology See also Sociology of race and ethnic relations Lester Frank Ward 1841 1913 considered to be one of the founders of American sociology rejected notions that there were fundamental differences that distinguished one race from another although he acknowledged that social conditions differed dramatically by race 188 At the turn of the 20th century sociologists viewed the concept of race in ways that were shaped by the scientific racism of the 19th and early 20th centuries 189 Many sociologists focused on African Americans called Negroes at that time and claimed that they were inferior to whites White sociologist Charlotte Perkins Gilman 1860 1935 for example used biological arguments to claim the inferiority of African Americans 189 American sociologist Charles H Cooley 1864 1929 theorized that differences among races were natural and that biological differences result in differences in intellectual abilities 190 188 Edward Alsworth Ross 1866 1951 also an important figure in the founding of American sociology and a eugenicist believed that whites were the superior race and that there were essential differences in temperament among races 188 In 1910 the Journal published an article by Ulysses G Weatherly 1865 1940 that called for white supremacy and segregation of the races to protect racial purity 188 W E B Du Bois 1868 1963 one of the first African American sociologists was the first sociologist to use sociological concepts and empirical research methods to analyze race as a social construct instead of a biological reality 189 Beginning in 1899 with his book The Philadelphia Negro Du Bois studied and wrote about race and racism throughout his career In his work he contended that social class colonialism and capitalism shaped ideas about race and racial categories Social scientists largely abandoned scientific racism and biological reasons for racial categorization schemes by the 1930s 191 Other early sociologists especially those associated with the Chicago School joined Du Bois in theorizing race as a socially constructed fact 191 By 1978 William Julius Wilson argued that race and racial classification systems were declining in significance and that instead social class more accurately described what sociologists had earlier understood as race 192 By 1986 sociologists Michael Omi and Howard Winant successfully introduced the concept of racial formation to describe the process by which racial categories are created 193 Omi and Winant assert that there is no biological basis for distinguishing among human groups along the lines of race 193 Eduardo Bonilla Silva Sociology professor at Duke University remarks 194 I contend that racism is more than anything else a matter of group power it is about a dominant racial group whites striving to maintain its systemic advantages and minorities fighting to subvert the racial status quo 195 The types of practices that take place under this new color blind racism is subtle institutionalized and supposedly not racial Color blind racism thrives on the idea that race is no longer an issue in the United States 195 There are contradictions between the alleged color blindness of most whites and the persistence of a color coded system of inequality citation needed Today sociologists generally understand race and racial categories as socially constructed and reject racial categorization schemes that depend on biological differences 191 Political and practical usesBiomedicine Main article Race and health See also Pharmacogenomics In the United States federal government policy promotes the use of racially categorized data to identify and address health disparities between racial or ethnic groups 196 In clinical settings race has sometimes been considered in the diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions Doctors have noted that some medical conditions are more prevalent in certain racial or ethnic groups than in others without being sure of the cause of those differences Recent interest in race based medicine or race targeted pharmacogenomics has been fueled by the proliferation of human genetic data which followed the decoding of the human genome in the first decade of the twenty first century There is an active debate among biomedical researchers about the meaning and importance of race in their research Proponents of the use of racial categories in biomedicine argue that continued use of racial categorizations in biomedical research and clinical practice makes possible the application of new genetic findings and provides a clue to diagnosis 197 198 Biomedical researchers positions on race fall into two main camps those who consider the concept of race to have no biological basis and those who consider it to have the potential to be biologically meaningful Members of the latter camp often base their arguments around the potential to create genome based personalized medicine 199 Other researchers point out that finding a difference in disease prevalence between two socially defined groups does not necessarily imply genetic causation of the difference 200 201 They suggest that medical practices should maintain their focus on the individual rather than an individual s membership to any group 202 They argue that overemphasizing genetic contributions to health disparities carries various risks such as reinforcing stereotypes promoting racism or ignoring the contribution of non genetic factors to health disparities 203 International epidemiological data show that living conditions rather than race make the biggest difference in health outcomes even for diseases that have race specific treatments 204 Some studies have found that patients are reluctant to accept racial categorization in medical practice 198 Law enforcement Main article Racial profiling See also Race and crime in the United Kingdom and Race and crime in the United States In an attempt to provide general descriptions that may facilitate the job of law enforcement officers seeking to apprehend suspects the United States FBI employs the term race to summarize the general appearance skin color hair texture eye shape and other such easily noticed characteristics of individuals whom they are attempting to apprehend From the perspective of law enforcement officers it is generally more important to arrive at a description that will readily suggest the general appearance of an individual than to make a scientifically valid categorization by DNA or other such means Thus in addition to assigning a wanted individual to a racial category such a description will include height weight eye color scars and other distinguishing characteristics Criminal justice agencies in England and Wales use at least two separate racial ethnic classification systems when reporting crime as of 2010 One is the system used in the 2001 Census when individuals identify themselves as belonging to a particular ethnic group W1 White British W2 White Irish W9 Any other white background M1 White and black Caribbean M2 White and black African M3 White and Asian M9 Any other mixed background A1 Asian Indian A2 Asian Pakistani A3 Asian Bangladeshi A9 Any other Asian background B1 Black Caribbean B2 Black African B3 Any other black background O1 Chinese O9 Any other The other is categories used by the police when they visually identify someone as belonging to an ethnic group e g at the time of a stop and search or an arrest White North European IC1 White South European IC2 Black IC3 Asian IC4 Chinese Japanese or South East Asian IC5 Middle Eastern IC6 and Unknown IC0 IC stands for Identification Code these items are also referred to as Phoenix classifications 205 Officers are instructed to record the response that has been given even if the person gives an answer which may be incorrect their own perception of the person s ethnic background is recorded separately 206 Comparability of the information being recorded by officers was brought into question by the Office for National Statistics ONS in September 2007 as part of its Equality Data Review one problem cited was the number of reports that contained an ethnicity of Not Stated 207 In many countries such as France the state is legally banned from maintaining data based on race 208 In the United States the practice of racial profiling has been ruled to be both unconstitutional and a violation of civil rights There is active debate regarding the cause of a marked correlation between the recorded crimes punishments meted out and the country s populations Many consider de facto racial profiling an example of institutional racism in law enforcement 209 Mass incarceration in the United States disproportionately impacts African American and Latino communities Michelle Alexander author of The New Jim Crow Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness 2010 argues that mass incarceration is best understood as not only a system of overcrowded prisons Mass incarceration is also the larger web of laws rules policies and customs that control those labeled criminals both in and out of prison 210 She defines it further as a system that locks people not only behind actual bars in actual prisons but also behind virtual bars and virtual walls illustrating the second class citizenship that is imposed on a disproportionate number of people of color specifically African Americans She compares mass incarceration to Jim Crow laws stating that both work as racial caste systems 211 Many research findings appear to agree that the impact of victim race in the interpersonal violence IPV arrest decision might include a racial bias in favor of white victims A 2011 study in a national sample of IPV arrests found that female arrest was more likely if the male victim was white and the female offender was black while male arrest was more likely if the female victim was white For both female and male arrest in IPV cases situations involving married couples were more likely to lead to arrest compared to dating or divorced couples More research is needed to understand agency and community factors that influence police behavior and how discrepancies in IPV interventions tools of justice can be addressed 212 Recent work using DNA cluster analysis to determine race background has been used by some criminal investigators to narrow their search for the identity of both suspects and victims 213 Proponents of DNA profiling in criminal investigations cite cases where leads based on DNA analysis proved useful but the practice remains controversial among medical ethicists defense lawyers and some in law enforcement 214 The Constitution of Australia contains a line about people of any race for whom it is deemed necessary to make special laws despite there being no agreed definition of race described in the document Forensic anthropology Main article Forensic anthropology Similarly forensic anthropologists draw on highly heritable morphological features of human remains e g cranial measurements to aid in the identification of the body including in terms of race In a 1992 article anthropologist Norman Sauer noted that anthropologists had generally abandoned the concept of race as a valid representation of human biological diversity except for forensic anthropologists He asked If races don t exist why are forensic anthropologists so good at identifying them 159 He concluded T he successful assignment of race to a skeletal specimen is not a vindication of the race concept but rather a prediction that an individual while alive was assigned to a particular socially constructed racial category A specimen may display features that point to African ancestry In this country that person is likely to have been labeled Black regardless of whether or not such a race actually exists in nature 159 Identification of the ancestry of an individual is dependent upon knowledge of the frequency and distribution of phenotypic traits in a population This does not necessitate the use of a racial classification scheme based on unrelated traits although the race concept is widely used in medical and legal contexts in the United States 215 Some studies have reported that races can be identified with a high degree of accuracy using certain methods such as that developed by Giles and Elliot However this method sometimes fails to be replicated in other times and places for instance when the method was re tested to identify Native Americans the average rate of accuracy dropped from 85 to 33 76 Prior information about the individual e g Census data is also important in allowing the accurate identification of the individual s race 216 In a different approach anthropologist C Loring Brace said The simple answer is that as members of the society that poses the question they are inculcated into the social conventions that determine the expected answer They should also be aware of the biological inaccuracies contained in that politically correct answer Skeletal analysis provides no direct assessment of skin color but it does allow an accurate estimate of original geographical origins African eastern Asian and European ancestry can be specified with a high degree of accuracy Africa of course entails black but black does not entail African 217 In association with a NOVA program in 2000 about race he wrote an essay opposing use of the term 218 A 2002 study found that about 13 of human craniometric variation existed between regions while 6 existed between local populations within regions and 81 within local populations In contrast the opposite pattern of genetic variation was observed for skin color which is often used to define race with 88 of variation between regions The study concluded that The apportionment of genetic diversity in skin color is atypical and cannot be used for purposes of classification 219 Similarly a 2009 study found that craniometrics could be used accurately to determine what part of the world someone was from based on their cranium however this study also found that there were no abrupt boundaries that separated craniometric variation into distinct racial groups 220 Another 2009 study showed that American blacks and whites had different skeletal morphologies and that significant patterning in variation in these traits exists within continents This suggests that classifying humans into races based on skeletal characteristics would necessitate many different races being defined 221 In 2010 philosopher Neven Sesardic argued that when several traits are analyzed at the same time forensic anthropologists can classify a person s race with an accuracy of close to 100 based on only skeletal remains 222 Sesardic s claim has been disputed by philosopher Massimo Pigliucci who accused Sesardic of cherry pick ing the scientific evidence and reach ing conclusions that are contradicted by it Specifically Pigliucci argued that Sesardic misrepresented a paper by Ousley et al 2009 and neglected to mention that they identified differentiation not just between individuals from different races but also between individuals from different tribes local environments and time periods 223 See alsoBiological anthropology Clan Cultural identity Environmental racism Epicanthic fold Ethnic nationalism Ethnic stereotype Genetic distance History of anthropometry Race identity and cranio facial description Human skin color Hypatia transracialism controversy Interracial marriage List of contemporary ethnic groups Melanism Multiracial Nationalism Nomen dubium a scientific name that is of unknown or doubtful application Pre Adamite Race and ethnicity in censuses US Race and genetics Race and health Race of the future Racialization Raciolinguistics Racism Supremacism Races of Mankind for the Field Museum of Natural History exhibition by sculptor Malvina Hoffman The Race Question All pages with titles beginning with RacialReferences a b c d e Barnshaw John 2008 Race In Schaefer Richard T ed Encyclopedia of Race Ethnicity and Society Vol 1 SAGE Publications pp 1091 3 ISBN 978 1 45 226586 5 Roediger David R Historical Foundations of Race Smithsonian Amutah C Greenidge K Mante A Munyikwa M Surya S L Higginbotham E Jones D S Lavizzo Mourey R Roberts D Tsai J Aysola J March 2021 Malina D ed Misrepresenting Race The Role of Medical Schools in Propagating Physician Bias The New England Journal of Medicine Massachusetts Medical Society 384 9 872 878 doi 10 1056 NEJMms2025768 ISSN 1533 4406 PMID 33406326 S2CID 230820421 Gannon Megan 5 February 2016 Race Is a Social Construct Scientists Argue Scientific American ISSN 0036 8733 Archived from the original on 14 February 2023 Retrieved 1 March 2023 a b Smedley Audrey Takezawa Yasuko I Wade Peter Race Human Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 22 August 2017 Yudell M Roberts D DeSalle R Tishkoff S 5 February 2016 Taking race out of human genetics Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 351 6273 564 565 Bibcode 2016Sci 351 564Y doi 10 1126 science aac4951 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 26912690 S2CID 206639306 See Montagu 1962 Bamshad amp Olson 2003 Sober 2000 pp 148 151 a b Lee et al 2008 We caution against making the naive leap to a genetic explanation for group differences in complex traits especially for human behavioral traits such as IQ scores AAA 1998 For example Evidence from the analysis of genetics e g DNA indicates that most physical variation about 94 lies within so called racial groups Conventional geographic racial groupings differ from one another only in about 6 of their genes This means that there is greater variation within racial groups than between them Keita et al 2004 Modern human biological variation is not structured into phylogenetic subspecies races nor are the taxa of the standard anthropological racial classifications breeding populations The racial taxa do not meet the phylogenetic criteria Race denotes socially constructed units as a function of the incorrect usage of the term Harrison Guy 2010 Race and Reality Amherst Prometheus Books Race is a poor empirical description of the patterns of difference that we encounter within our species The billions of humans alive today simply do not fit into neat and tidy biological boxes called races Science has proven this conclusively The concept of race is not scientific and goes against what is known about our ever changing and complex biological diversity Roberts Dorothy 2011 Fatal Invention London New York The New Press The genetic differences that exist among populations are characterized by gradual changes across geographic regions not sharp categorical distinctions Groups of people across the globe have varying frequencies of polymorphic genes which are genes with any of several differing nucleotide sequences There is no such thing as a set of genes that belongs exclusively to one group and not to another The clinal gradually changing nature of geographic genetic difference is complicated further by the migration and mixing that human groups have engaged in since prehistory Human beings do not fit the zoological definition of race A mountain of evidence assembled by historians anthropologists and biologists proves that race is not and cannot be a natural division of human beings Fuentes Agustin 9 April 2012 Race Is Real but not in the way Many People Think Psychology Today The Royal Institution panel discussion What Science Tells us about Race and Racism 16 March 2016 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 a b Jorde Lynn B Wooding Stephen P 2004 Genetic variation classification and race Nature Nature Research 36 11 Suppl S28 S33 doi 10 1038 ng1435 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 15508000 S2CID 15251775 Ancestry then is a more subtle and complex description of an individual s genetic makeup than is race This is in part a consequence of the continual mixing and migration of human populations throughout history Because of this complex and interwoven history many loci must be examined to derive even an approximate portrayal of individual ancestry Michael White Why Your Race Isn t Genetic Pacific Standard Retrieved 13 December 2014 O ngoing contacts plus the fact that we were a small genetically homogeneous species to begin with has resulted in relatively close genetic relationships despite our worldwide presence The DNA differences between humans increase with geographical distance but boundaries between populations are as geneticists Kenneth Weiss and Jeffrey Long put it multilayered porous ephemeral and difficult to identify Pure geographically separated ancestral populations are an abstraction There is no reason to think that there ever were isolated homogeneous parental populations at any time in our human past Bryc Katarzyna Durand Eric Y Macpherson Michael Reich David Mountain Joanna L 8 January 2015 The Genetic Ancestry of African Americans Latinos and European Americans across the United States PDF American Journal of Human Genetics Cell Press on behalf of the American Society of Human Genetics 96 1 37 53 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2014 11 010 ISSN 0002 9297 PMC 4289685 PMID 25529636 S2CID 3889161 Archived PDF from the original on 10 May 2022 Retrieved 1 June 2022 The relationship between self reported identity and genetic African ancestry as well as the low numbers of self reported African Americans with minor levels of African ancestry provide insight into the complexity of genetic and social consequences of racial categorization assortative mating and the impact of notions of race on patterns of mating and self identity in the US Our results provide empirical support that over recent centuries many individuals with partial African and Native American ancestry have passed into the white community with multiple lines of evidence establishing African and Native American ancestry in self reported European Americans Zimmer Carl 24 December 2014 White Black A Murky Distinction Grows Still Murkier The New York Times Retrieved 24 December 2014 On average the scientists found people who identified as African American had genes that were only 73 2 percent African European genes accounted for 24 percent of their DNA while 8 percent came from Native Americans Latinos on the other hand had genes that were on average 65 1 percent European 18 percent Native American and 6 2 percent African The researchers found that European Americans had genomes that were on average 98 6 percent European 19 percent African and 18 Native American These broad estimates masked wide variation among individuals a b Lieberman L Kaszycka K A Martinez Fuentes A J Yablonsky L Kirk R C Strkalj G Wang Q Sun L December 2004 The race concept in six regions variation without consensus Coll Antropol 28 2 907 21 PMID 15666627 a b Graves 2001 p page needed Keita et al 2004 AAPA 1996 p 714 Pure races in the sense of genetically homogeneous populations do not exist in the human species today nor is there any evidence that they have ever existed in the past a b Race2 Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Retrieved 5 October 2012 1 Each of the major division of humankind having distinct physical characteristics example elided 1 1 mass noun The fact or condition of belonging to a racial division or group the qualities or characteristics associated with this 1 2 A group of people sharing the same culture history language etc an ethnic group example elided Provides 8 definitions from biological to literary only the most pertinent have been quoted Keita et al 2004 Many terms requiring definition for use describe demographic population groups better than the term race because they invite examination of the criteria for classification a b Zimmer Carl 14 March 2023 Guidelines Warn Against Racial Categories in Genetic Research The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Pillay Kathryn 2019 Indian Identity in South Africa The Palgrave Handbook of Ethnicity Palgrave Macmillan pp 77 92 doi 10 1007 978 981 13 2898 5 9 ISBN 978 981 13 2897 8 Wang Hansi Lo 29 January 2018 No Middle Eastern Or North African Category On 2020 Census Bureau Says NPR Retrieved 16 August 2019 Williams S M Templeton A R 2003 Race and Genomics New England Journal of Medicine 348 25 2581 2582 doi 10 1056 nejm200306193482521 PMID 12815151 Templeton 2002 pp 31 56 Olson Steve 2002 Mapping Human History Discovering the Past Through Our Genes Boston a b c Templeton 2013 Reich David 23 March 2018 How Genetics Is Changing Our Understanding of Race The New York Times Archived from the original on 8 September 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2019 Groundbreaking advances in DNA sequencing technology have been made over the last two decades These advances enable us to measure with exquisite accuracy what fraction of an individual s genetic ancestry traces back to say West Africa 500 years ago before the mixing in the Americas of the West African and European gene pools that were almost completely isolated for the last 70 000 years With the help of these tools we are learning that while race may be a social construct differences in genetic ancestry that happen to correlate to many of today s racial constructs are real Recent genetic studies have demonstrated differences across populations not just in the genetic determinants of simple traits such as skin color but also in more complex traits like bodily dimensions and susceptibility to diseases How Not To Talk About Race And Genetics Buzzfeed News 30 March 2018 Archived from the original on 30 August 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2019 The robust body of scholarship recognizes the existence of geographically based genetic variation in our species but shows that such variation is not consistent with biological definitions of race Nor does that variation map precisely onto ever changing socially defined racial groups Lee 1997 See Blank Dabady amp Citro 2004 Smaje 1997 See Lee 1997 Nobles 2000 Morgan 1975 as cited in Lee 1997 p 407 See Morgan 1975 as cited in Lee 1997 p 407 Smedley 2007 Sivanandan 2000harvnb error no target CITEREFSivanandan2000 help Crenshaw 1988 Conley 2007 Winfield 2007 It was Aristotle who first arranged all animals into a single graded scale that placed humans at the top as the most perfect iteration By the late 19th century the idea that inequality was the basis of natural order known as the great chain of being was part of the common lexicon Lee 1997 citing Morgan 1975 and Appiah 1992 See Sivanandan 2000harvnb error no target CITEREFSivanandan2000 help Muffoletto 2003 McNeilly et al 1996 Psychiatric instrument called the Perceived Racism Scale provides a measure of the frequency of exposure to many manifestations of racism including individual and institutional also assesses motional and behavioral coping responses to racism Miles 2000 Owens amp King 1999 King 2007 For example the association of blacks with poverty and welfare is due not to race per se but to the link that race has with poverty and its associated disadvantages p 75 Schaefer 2008 In many parts of Latin America racial groupings are based less on the biological physical features and more on an intersection between physical features and social features such as economic class dress education and context Thus a more fluid treatment allows for the construction of race as an achieved status rather than an ascribed status as is the case in the United States See Brace 2000a Gill 2000a Lee 1997 The very naturalness of reality is itself the effect of a particular set of discursive constructions In this way discourse does not simply reflect reality but actually participates in its construction Hartigan John June 2008 Is Race Still Socially Constructed The Recent Controversy over Race and Medical Genetics Science as Culture 17 2 163 193 doi 10 1080 09505430802062943 S2CID 18451795 a b c Marks 2008 p 28 See Lie 2004 Thompson amp Hickey 2005 Gordon 1964 p page needed AAA 1998 Palmie 2007 Mevorach 2007 Segal 1991 Bindon 2005 Keita et al 2004 Religious cultural social national ethnic linguistic genetic geographical and anatomical groups have been and sometimes still are called races Kennedy Rebecca F 2013 Introduction Race and Ethnicity in the Classical world An Anthology of Primary Sources in Translation Hackett Publishing Company p xiii ISBN 978 1603849944 The ancients would not understand the social construct we call race any more than they would understand the distinction modem scholars and social scientists generally draw between race and ethnicity The modern concept of race is a product of the colonial enterprises of European powers from the 16th to 18th centuries that identified race in terms of skin color and physical difference In the post Enlightenment world a scientific biological idea of race suggested that human difference could be explained by biologically distinct groups of humans evolved from separate origins who could be distinguished by physical differences predominantly skin color Such categorizations would have confused the ancient Greeks and Romans Bancel Nicolas David Thomas Thomas Dominic eds 23 May 2019 Introduction The Invention of Race Scientific and Popular Representations of Race from Linnaeus to the Ethnic Shows The Invention of Race Scientific and Popular Representations Routledge p 11 ISBN 978 0367208646 The Invention of Race has assisted us in the process of locating the epistemological moment somewhere between 1730 and 1790 when the concept of race was invented and rationalized A moment that was accompanied by a revolution in the way in which the human body was studied and observed in order to formulate scientific conclusions relating to human variability a b Smedley 1999 Meltzer 1993 Takaki 1993 Banton 1977 For examples see Lewis 1990 Dikotter 1992 a b Race Ethnicity and Genetics Working Group October 2005 The Use of Racial Ethnic and Ancestral Categories in Human Genetics Research American Journal of Human Genetics 77 4 519 32 doi 10 1086 491747 PMC 1275602 PMID 16175499 Todorov 1993 Brace 2005 p 27 Slotkin 1965 p 177 a b c Graves 2001 p 39 Marks 1995 Graves 2001 pp 42 43 Stocking 1968 pp 38 40 Hunt James 24 February 1863 Introductory address on the study of Anthropology The Anthropological Review 1 3 we should always remember that by whatever means the Negro for instance acquired his present physical mental and moral character whether he has risen from an ape or descended from a perfect man we still know that the Races of Europe have now much in their mental and moral nature which the races of Africa have not got Desmond amp Moore 2009 pp 332 341 Cela Conde Camilo J Ayala Francisco J 2007 Human Evolution Trails from the Past Oxford University Press p 195 Lewin Roger 2005 Human Evolution an illustrated introduction Fifth ed Blackwell Publishing p 159 Stringer Chris 2012 Lone Survivors How We Came to Be the Only Humans on Earth London Times Books ISBN 978 0805088915 a b Cravens 2010 Currell amp Cogdell 2006 Hirschman Charles 2004 The Origins and Demise of the Concept of Race Population and Development Review 30 3 385 415 doi 10 1111 j 1728 4457 2004 00021 x ISSN 1728 4457 S2CID 145485765 See Cravens 2010 Angier 2000 Amundson 2005 Reardon 2005 See Smedley 2002 Boas 1912 See Marks 2002 Montagu 1941 Montagu 1997 Wilson amp Brown 1953 a b Goodman A H November 2000 Why genes don t count for racial differences in health American Journal of Public Health 90 11 1699 1702 doi 10 2105 ajph 90 11 1699 ISSN 0090 0036 PMC 1446406 PMID 11076233 See Keita et al 2004 Templeton 1998 Long amp Kittles 2003 Haig et al 2006 a b Templeton 1998 Templeton 1998 Genetic surveys and the analyses of DNA haplotype trees show that human races are not distinct lineages and that this is not due to recent admixture human races are not and never were pure Relethford John H 23 February 2017 Biological Anthropology Population Genetics and Race In Zack Naomi ed The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Race doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780190236953 013 20 ISBN 978 0 19 023695 3 Human populations do not exhibit the levels of geographic isolation or genetic divergence to fit the subspecies model of race Wright 1978 See Keita et al 2004 Templeton 1998 a b AABA Statement on Race amp Racism physanth org Andreasen 2000 Marks 2008 p 28 29 Marks 2008 a b Lieberman amp Jackson 1995 a b c Hunley Keith L Cabana Graciela S Long Jeffrey C 1 December 2015 The apportionment of human diversity revisited American Journal of Physical Anthropology 160 4 561 569 doi 10 1002 ajpa 22899 ISSN 1096 8644 PMID 26619959 a b Caspari 2003 Brace amp Montagu 1965 p page needed Brace 2000 p 301 a b Livingstone amp Dobzhansky 1962 Ehrlich amp Holm 1964 Weiss 2005 Marks 2002 Boyd 1950 Lieberman amp Kirk 1997 p 195 Molnar 1992 Human Genome Project 2003 Pigliucci Massimo Kaplan Jonathan December 2003 On the Concept of Biological Race and Its Applicability to Humans Philosophy of Science 70 5 1161 1172 doi 10 1086 377397 S2CID 44750046 Walsh Anthony Yun Ilhong October 2011 Race and Criminology in the Age of Genomic Science Social Science Quarterly n a doi 10 1111 j 1540 6237 2011 00818 x Bamshad et al 2004 Lewontin 1972 Jorde Lynn B et al 2000 Medical genetics 2nd ed full citation needed Long 2009 p 802 Romualdi Chiara Balding David Nasidze Ivane S Risch Gregory Robichaux Myles Sherry Stephen T Stoneking Mark Batzer Mark A Barbujani Guido April 2002 Patterns of human diversity within and among continents inferred from biallelic DNA polymorphisms Genome Research 12 4 602 612 doi 10 1101 gr 214902 ISSN 1088 9051 PMC 187513 PMID 11932244 Edwards 2003 Dawkins Richard Wong Yan 2005 The Ancestor s Tale A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 406 407 ISBN 978 0 61 861916 0 Summarizing Edwards thesis We can all happily agree that human racial classification is of no social value and is positively destructive of social and human relations That is one reason why I object to ticking boxes on forms and why I object to positive discrimination in job selection But that doesn t mean that race is of virtually no genetic or taxonomic significance This is Edwards s point and he reasons as follows However small the racial partition of total variation may be if such racial characteristics as there are highly correlated with other racial characteristics they are by definition informative and therefore of taxonomic significance See Cavalli Sforza Menozzi amp Piazza 1994 Bamshad et al 2004 p 599 Tang et al 2005 Rosenberg et al 2005 If enough markers are used individuals can be partitioned into genetic clusters that match major geographic subdivisions of the globe a b Tang et al 2005 Mountain amp Risch 2004 Gitschier 2005 a b Witherspoon et al 2007 Brace 2005 p 326 Kaplan Jonathan Michael January 2011 Race What Biology Can Tell Us about a Social Construct In Encyclopedia of Life Sciences ELS John Wiley amp Sons Ltd Chichester Kaplan Jonathan Michael Winther Rasmus Gronfeldt 2014 Realism Antirealism and Conventionalism About Race Philosophy of Science 81 5 1039 1052 doi 10 1086 678314 S2CID 55148854 Winther Rasmus Gronfeldt 2015 The Genetic Reification of Race A Story of Two Mathematical Methods PDF Critical Philosophy of Race 2 2 204 223 Kaplan amp Winther 2013 Weiss K M Fullerton S M 2005 Racing around getting nowhere Evolutionary Anthropology 14 5 165 69 doi 10 1002 evan 20079 S2CID 84927946 Mills C W 1988 But What Are You Really The Metaphysics of Race Blackness visible essays on philosophy and race Ithaca NY Cornell University Press pp 41 66 The Genetic Reification of Race A story of two mathematical methods PDF Retrieved 15 January 2020 Gannett Lisa September 2014 Biogeographical ancestry and race Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 47 173 184 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2014 05 017 PMID 24989973 Barbujani 2005 Hunley Keith L Healy Meghan E Long Jeffrey C 18 February 2009 The global pattern of gene identity variation reveals a history of long range migrations bottlenecks and local mate exchange Implications for biological race PDF American Journal of Physical Anthropology 139 1 35 46 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20932 hdl 2027 42 62159 PMID 19226641 Gordon 1964 p page needed New Ideas New Fuels Craig Venter at the Oxonian FORA 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Schemes University of Minnesota Press Nobles 2000 Revisions to the Standards for the Classification of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity Office of Management and Budget 30 October 1997 Archived from the original on 15 March 2009 Retrieved 19 March 2009 Also U S Census Bureau Guidance on the Presentation and Comparison of Race and Hispanic Origin Data Archived 8 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine and B03002 Hispanic or Latino Origin by Race 2007 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates Archived 27 December 1996 at the Wayback Machine Horsman Reginald 1981 Race and Manifest Destiny The Origins of American Radial Anglo Saxonism Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 210 This reference is speaking in historic terms but there is not reason to think that this perception has altered much Larsen Clark Spencer ed 2010 A companion to Biological Anthropology Wiley Blackwell pp 13 26 ISBN 978 1 4051 8900 2 Race as a typological characterization of human variation was to become a dominant theme in physical anthropology until the mid twentieth century Controversies over race did not end in the 1960s but there is a general sense in physical anthropology that the earlier use of race as a unit of study or as a conceptual unit is no longer viable and that this transition came in the 1960s a b Lieberman Kirk amp Corcoran 2003 a b c Sauer 1992 Wagner Jennifer K Yu Joon Ho Ifekwunigwe Jayne O Harrell Tanya M Bamshad Michael J Royal Charmaine D February 2017 Anthropologists views on race ancestry and genetics American Journal of Physical Anthropology 162 2 318 327 doi 10 1002 ajpa 23120 PMC 5299519 PMID 27874171 Strkalj Goran Wang Qian 2003 On the Concept of Race in Chinese Biological Anthropology Alive and Well PDF Current Anthropology The University of Chicago Press 44 3 403 doi 10 1086 374899 S2CID 224790805 Black amp Ferguson 2011 p 125 Strkalj Goran 2007 The Status of the Race Concept in Contemporary Biological Anthropology A Review PDF Anthropologist Kamla Raj 9 1 73 78 doi 10 1080 09720073 2007 11890983 S2CID 13690181 Kaszycka Katarzyna A Strkalj Goran Strzalko Jan 2009 Current Views of European Anthropologists on Race Influence of Educational and Ideological Background American Anthropologist 111 1 43 56 doi 10 1111 j 1548 1433 2009 01076 x S2CID 55419265 Lieberman Leonard Kirk Rodney C Littlefield Alice 2003 Perishing Paradigm Race 1931 1999 American Anthropologist 105 1 110 113 doi 10 1525 aa 2003 105 1 110 An article in the same issue questions the precise rate of decline but from their opposing perspective agrees that the Negroid Caucasoid Mongoloid paradigm has fallen into near total disfavor Cartmill Matt Brown Kaye 2003 Surveying the Race Concept A Reply to Lieberman Kirk and Littlefield American Anthropologist 105 1 114 115 doi 10 1525 aa 2003 105 1 114 AAA 1998 Bindon Jim 2005 Post World War II PDF University of Alabama Archived from the original PDF on 30 August 2006 Retrieved 28 August 2006 Reynolds Larry T Lieberman Leonard 1996 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Terms Race and Ethnicity Archives of Pediatrics amp Adolescent Medicine 155 no 2 119 In future issues of the ARCHIVES we ask authors to not use race and ethnicity when there is no biological scientific or sociological reason for doing so Race or ethnicity should not be used as explanatory variables when the underlying constructs are variables that can and should be measured directly eg educational level of subjects household income of the families single vs 2 parent households employment of parents owning vs renting one s home and other measures of socioeconomic status In contrast the recent attention on decreasing health disparities uses race and ethnicity not as explanatory variables but as ways of examining the underlying sociocultural reasons for these disparities and appropriately targeting attention and resources on children and adolescents with poorer health In select issues and questions such as these use of race and ethnicity is appropriate See program announcement and requests for grant applications at the NIH website at nih gov Archived 9 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine Schwartz Robert S 3 May 2001 Racial Profiling in Medical Research The New England Journal of Medicine 344 18 1392 1393 doi 10 1056 NEJM200105033441810 PMID 11333999 Ann Morning 2008 Reconstructing Race in Science and Society Biology Textbooks 1952 2002 American Journal of Sociology 114 Suppl S106 S137 Gissis S 2008 When is race a race 1946 2003 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 39 4 437 50 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2008 09 006 PMID 19026975 The conceptualization and operationalization of race and ethnicity by health services researchers Susan Moscou Nursing Inquiry Volume 15 Issue 2 pp 94 105 June 2008 Strkalj Goran Solyali Veli 2010 Human Biological Variation in Anatomy Textbooks The Role of Ancestry Studies on Ethno Medicine 4 3 157 61 doi 10 1080 09735070 2010 11886375 S2CID 73945508 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5 5 385 392 doi 10 1097 01 GIM 0000087990 30961 72 PMID 14501834 In summary they argues that in order to predict the clinical success of pharmacogenomic research scholars must conduct subsidiary research on two fronts Science wherein the degree of correspondence between popular and professional racial categories can be assessed and society at large through which attitudinal factors moderate the relationship between scientific soundness and societal acceptance To accept race as proxy then may be necessary but insufficient to solidify the future of race based pharmacogenomics Lee Catherine March 2009 Race and ethnicity in biomedical research How do scientists construct and explain differences in health Social Science amp Medicine 68 6 1183 1190 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2008 12 036 PMID 19185964 Graves 2011 Fullwiley 2011 Harpending 2006 p 458 On the other hand information about the race of patients will be useless as soon as we discover and can type cheaply the underlying genes that are 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five percent rule for subspecies Condor 51 6 250 58 doi 10 2307 1364805 JSTOR 1364805 S2CID 87016263 Anderson N B Bulatao R A Cohen B 2004 Critical Perspectives on Racial and Ethnic Differences in Health in Late Life 2 Racial and Ethnic Identification Official Classifications and Health Disparities National Academies Press National Research Council US Panel on Race Ethnicity and Health in Later Life ISBN 0 309 09211 6 Anemone Robert L 2011 Race and Human Diversity A Biocultural Approach Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 131 83876 5 Cartmill Matt 1998 The status of the race concept in physical anthropology PDF American Anthropologist American Anthropological Association 100 3 651 660 doi 10 1525 aa 1998 100 3 651 Archived from the original PDF on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Coop G Pickrell J K Novembre J Kudaravalli S Li J 2009 The Role of Geography in Human Adaptation PLOS Genetics 5 6 e1000500 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1000500 PMC 2685456 PMID 19503611 Cooper R S Kaufman J S Ward R 2003 Race and genomics New England Journal of Medicine 348 12 1166 70 doi 10 1056 NEJMsb022863 PMID 12646675 S2CID 11095726 Davenport Lauren May 2020 The Fluidity of Racial Classifications Annual Review of Political Science 23 221 240 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 060418 042801 S2CID 212962606 Dobzhansky T 1970 Genetics of the Evolutionary Process New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0231028377 Duster T 2005 Race and reification in science Science 307 5712 1050 1051 doi 10 1126 science 1110303 PMID 15718453 S2CID 28235427 Graves Joseph L 2006 What We Know and What We Don t Know Human Genetic Variation and the Social Construction of Race Is Race Real Social Science Research Council Retrieved 22 January 2011 Hawks John 2013 Significance of Neandertal and Denisovan Genomes in Human Evolution Annual Review of Anthropology Annual Reviews 42 1 433 449 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 092412 155548 ISBN 978 0 8243 1942 7 ISSN 0084 6570 Helms Janet E Jernigan Maryam Mascher Jackquelyn 2005 The meaning of race in psychology and how to change it A methodological perspective American Psychologist 60 1 27 36 doi 10 1037 0003 066X 60 1 27 PMID 15641919 S2CID 1676488 Hooton Earnest A 22 January 1926 Methods of Racial Analysis Science 63 1621 75 81 Bibcode 1926Sci 63 75H doi 10 1126 science 63 1621 75 PMID 17774966 James Michael 28 May 2008 Race In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2017 ed Jorde LB Wooding SP November 2004 Genetic variation classification and race Nature Genetics 36 11 Suppl S28 33 doi 10 1038 ng1435 PMID 15508000 Joseph Celucien L 2012 Race Religion and The Haitian Revolution Essays on Faith Freedom and Decolonization CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform Joseph Celucien L 2013 From Toussaint to Price Mars Rhetoric Race and Religion in Haitian Thought CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform Keita S O Y Kittles R A 1997 The persistence of racial thinking and the myth of racial divergence American Anthropologist 99 3 534 544 doi 10 1525 aa 1997 99 3 534 Krimsky Sheldon Sloan Kathleen eds 2011 Race and the Genetic Revolution Science Myth and Culture Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 52769 9 Mayr Ernst 1969 Principles of Systematic Zoology New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0070411433 Mayr Ernst Winter 2002 The Biology of Race and the Concept of Equality Daedalus MIT Press on behalf of American Academy of Arts amp Sciences 31 1 89 94 JSTOR 20027740 Patten M A Unitt P 2002 Diagnosability versus mean differences of sage sparrow subspecies Auk 119 1 26 35 doi 10 1642 0004 8038 2002 119 0026 DVMDOS 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86356616 Shriver M D Kittles R A 2004 Opinion Genetic ancestry and the search for personalized genetic histories Nature Reviews Genetics 5 8 611 18 doi 10 1038 nrg1405 PMID 15266343 S2CID 4465469 Smedley A Smedley B D January 2005 Race as biology is fiction racism as a social problem is real Anthropological and historical perspectives on the social construction of race PDF American Psychologist 60 1 16 26 doi 10 1037 0003 066X 60 1 16 PMID 15641918 Stanton W 1982 1960 The leopard s spots scientific attitudes toward race in America 1815 1859 University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226771229 Sussman Richard Wald 2014 The Myth of Race The Troubling Persistence of an Unscientific Idea Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674417311 Tishkoff Sarah A Kidd Kenneth K 2004 Implications of biogeography of human populations for race and medicine Nature Genetics 36 11 Suppl S21 527 doi 10 1038 ng1438 PMID 15507999 Travassos Claudia Williams David R June 2004 The concept and measurement of race and their relationship to public health a review focused on Brazil and the United States PDF Cadernos de Saude Publica 20 3 660 678 doi 10 1590 S0102 311X2004000300003 PMID 15263977 UNESCO and Its Programme The Race Question PDF Paris UNESCO 1950 Publication 791 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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