Journals Higher Education

£72.00

Hardback

This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.

Published: 03 August 2017

376 Pages

235x156mm

ISBN: 9780199917853


Also Available As:

Ebook


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Counting Americans

How the US Census Classified the Nation

Paul Schor

  • Shows that U.S. census categories are more complex than previous histories of the census have shown, and directly contributed to the social construction of race.
  • Demonstrates the fluidity of racial categories in the U.S. census between the nineteenth and twentieth century, and the social implications of that fluidity.
  • Traces the visible and less known connections between categories such as slave, mulatto, mixed, "Mexican race," and more current categories of the US census.
  • Shows how the mobilization of individuals or groups over contested statistical categories occured in the first half of the twentieth century, much earlier than race-based affirmative action policies since the 1960's.
  • Draws on previously unused documents from the Census Bureau archive and other unpublished sources to explore the interactions between census officials and laypeople.

£72.00

Hardback

This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.

Published: 03 August 2017

376 Pages

235x156mm

ISBN: 9780199917853


Also Available As:

Ebook


Also Available In:


Bookseller Code (AJ)

Counting Americans

How the US Census Classified the Nation

Paul Schor

  • Shows that U.S. census categories are more complex than previous histories of the census have shown, and directly contributed to the social construction of race.
  • Demonstrates the fluidity of racial categories in the U.S. census between the nineteenth and twentieth century, and the social implications of that fluidity.
  • Traces the visible and less known connections between categories such as slave, mulatto, mixed, "Mexican race," and more current categories of the US census.
  • Shows how the mobilization of individuals or groups over contested statistical categories occured in the first half of the twentieth century, much earlier than race-based affirmative action policies since the 1960's.
  • Draws on previously unused documents from the Census Bureau archive and other unpublished sources to explore the interactions between census officials and laypeople.

£72.00

Hardback

This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.

Published: 03 August 2017

376 Pages

235x156mm

ISBN: 9780199917853


Also Available As:

Ebook


Also Available In:


Bookseller Code (AJ)