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Abstract
Early assimilation theorists predicted the eventual loss of ethnic distinctiveness for
immigrants in the United States. In this paper, the author not only questions the
possibilities that Latino and Latina Americans have for losing their ethnic distinctiveness,
but also proposes that these possibilities vary widely within the Hispanic population. The
central question posed in this paper is: In addition to traditional predictors of assimilation,
do experiences of discrimination also affect ethnic identification patterns for Hispanics?
Based on the analysis of two data sets, the 1989 Latino National Political Survey and the
2002 National Survey of Latinos, the author provides evidence that Latino/a Americans
who have experienced discrimination are less likely to self-identify as “Americans,” and
more likely to self-identify with pan-ethnic or hyphenated American labels. The author
contends that this is because experiences of discrimination teach some Latinos and Latinas
that other citizens of the United States do not view them as “unhyphenated Americans.”
The author further proposes that, through a process of racialized assimilation, these Latin
American immigrants and their children are becoming Latino and Latina Americans.
Introduction
At a rally in Siler City, North Carolina, one chilly afternoon in February 2000, David
Duke told his attentive, although sparse, crowd that foreign elements wanted to
take over his and their America. In Duke’s disparaging diatribe about the failure of
Latin American immigrants to blend into the melting pot, he did not mention that
Irish and Italian immigrants had also been deemed incapable of assimilating in the
early 20th century. Duke did make himself clear that when he refers to America
and American values, he is referring only to the direct descendants of European-
Americans. By doing this, he elucidated what normally goes unspoken – that
the unmarked label “American” in most cases means European-American. For
this reason, when we refer to African-Americans or Asian-Americans, we specify
with hyphenated labels. On the other hand, when we are referring to European-
Americans, “American” usually suffices. For example, Feagin (2000:100) reports
that, in a six-month study of 65 U.S. newspapers, the term “American” was
found many times, but the expression “white American” was exclusively used in
juxtaposition to another racial category, usually “African-American.”
If the unhyphenated American label is reserved for white Americans as
Feagin (2000) argues, then to what extent can Latin American immigrants and
their descendants become Americans? Feagin contends that the unhyphenated
American label refers to those people in the United States who have the luxury
The author wishes to thank the current and previous editor of Social Forces, the two
anonymous reviewers, Catherine Harnois, Charles Kurzman and Ted Mouw for their in-
sightful comments on this manuscript. Direct correspondence to Tanya Golash-Boza, De-
partment of Sociology, University of Kansas, 1415 Jayhawk Blvd., Room 716, Lawrence,
Kansas 66045. E-mail: tgb@ku.edu
© The University of North Carolina Press Social Forces, Volume 85, Number 1, September 2006
28 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
of pretending they do not have a racial or ethnic status. Pamela Perry’s (2002)
ethnographic study of racial identities among high school students reveals that
many whites see themselves as not having a racial status or identity. For Perry’s
white high school informants, those who were attuned to the prevalence of
discrimination in U.S. society were more likely to recognize their white privilege,
and thus their racial status as white. Among Bonilla-Silva’s (2003) informants,
one of the primary distinctions between the racial attitudes of blacks and whites
was the recognition of the existence and prevalence of discrimination. His
analyses demonstrate that only a small percentage of whites are aware of the
omnipresence of discrimination in U.S. society. Perry’s (2002), Feagin’s (2000) and
Bonilla-Silva’s (2003) analyses demonstrate that the recognition of the existence
of discrimination plays a key role in the awareness of one’s racial status.
I will argue that the recognition of discrimination plays a fundamental role
in determining not only one’s racial attitudes, but also one’s racial or ethnic
identification. Part of being white is being able to ignore the prevalence of racial
discrimination in U.S. society (McIntosh 1998). In the United States, the ethnic
identity “American” is an unmarked ethnic identity just as white is an unmarked
racial identity (Dyer 1999). As such, part of being American is being able to
ignore the prevalence of discrimination based on national origin in the United
States. While whites self-identify as Americans, non-white Americans recognize
that they are not Americans, but African-Americans, Native Americans, Asian
Americans or Latino/a Americans. In this sense, how one becomes American
or how one assimilates into American society depends in large part on one’s
racial status. Nevertheless, as I will demonstrate, scholars of immigration have
not given sufficient consideration to racial status when studying patterns of
immigrant adaptation.
Assimilation
Straight-Line Assimilation
The concept of assimilation was developed in the beginning of the 20th century,
and can be understood as the process by which immigrants are incorporated
into the host society. Two underlying assumptions in assimilation theory are
that all immigrants will eventually assimilate, and that the primary factor that
determines their level of assimilation is their generational status. Gordon (1964)
argued that assimilation equals Americanization, and that Americanization means
assimilating into the Anglo-Saxon core. However, more recent scholars such as
Alba and Nee (1997) contend that assimilation can also take other forms. They
specify that, while some immigrants assimilate into majority culture and become
white Americans, others assimilate into minority culture and become black
Americans. All of these theorists agree that assimilation entails the eventual
loss of attachment to one’s country of origin and the disappearance of the
30 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
Segmented Assimilation
Rumbaut and Portes (2001:6) offer an alternative to the straight-line assimilation
model, known as segmented assimilation. In this model, assimilation into
mainstream U.S. society is an outcome for some, but not all, immigrants and
their children. They argue that processes of assimilation are affected by a number
of factors including: the human and financial capital of the immigrant parents,
the pace of acculturation, family structure, cultural and economic obstacles, the
perceived race of immigrants, and the community and family resources available
to the immigrants and their children in the United States.
Segmented assimilation theorists (Zhou 1997, Rumbaut and Portes 2001)
delineate three exclusive paths of assimilation into U.S. society. Those immigrants
with high levels of human, social and financial capital are likely to experience
a favorable reception in the United States and embark on a path towards
assimilation and upward mobility. Another path is that of downward assimilation,
which occurs when immigrants with few resources are unable to find employment
with suitable wages and are confined to poor inner-city areas. Consequently,
their children identify with the experiences of historical minorities and do not
adopt the “immigrant optimism” (Kao and Tienda 1995) of their parents. The third
path is that of selective acculturation, where immigrant parents encourage their
children to conform to the norms of success in the United States, while keeping
them from assimilating into oppositional adolescent culture, by reinforcing
traditional cultural values and ways of life. Rumbaut and Portes (2001) purport
that selective acculturation is most beneficial for children of immigrants, as it
allows them to hold on to the positive traits of their ethnic communities without
risking downward assimilation into the underclass.
Segmented assimilation theory provides a comprehensive description of the
contemporary processes of assimilation in the United States, yet it does not fully
address the primacy of race in processes of assimilation. For example, Portes
and Rumbaut (2001:173) argue that pan-ethnic identity is “an indicator of growing
awareness of externally defined ethnic categories,” yet they do not discuss the
role of racial discrimination in reinforcing these categories. They further posit that
non-whiteness poses a barrier to occupational mobility and social acceptance
(56). They also point out that “the children of Asian, black, mulatto and mestizo
immigrants cannot so easily reduce their ethnicity to a level of a voluntary decision.”
Latino(a)-American through Racialized Assimilation • 31
(55) They could have used these findings to conclude that brown and black
immigrants’ assimilation options are constrained by their skin color, but they do
not come to that conclusion. As it stands, their theory of segmented assimilation
does not fully account for the role of racialization in forging immigrants’ paths of
adaptation. This is because these scholars do not address the extent to which
whiteness is a prerequisite for assimilation into dominant culture, nor do they
fully interrogate the meanings of the ethnic identities they discuss. As Itzigsohn
et al. (2005:53) point out in their recent article, “in segmented assimilation theory,
there is no exploration of the meanings attached to identities.” In the following
section, I discuss the meanings of ethnic labels while arguing that whiteness is
implicit in the unhyphenated American label and positing that Hispanicity implies
foreignness. Then, I outline the implications that the meanings of these signifiers
and the consequent discrimination have for understanding immigrants’ paths of
adaptation.
Becoming American?
Proponents of assimilation theory insist that ethnic distinctiveness will eventually
disappear for the children of immigrants in the United States. However, a
number of other scholars have found that many immigrants associate being
American with being white. For example, Rumbaut (1994) recounts that a 16-
year old Cambodian girl, when asked about her American identity responded:
“How could I be American? I black skin, black eyes, black hair … My English is
not good enough and my skin color black.” (750) In addition, a Hispanic-looking
appearance entails treatment as a foreigner even for native-born Americans. For
example, Prudence Carter’s (2005) Dominican informant, despite having been
born in the United States, said that she was Hispanic and not American because
American society does not accept her. Patricia Zavella (1996) recounts the story
of a Chicano, who despite the fact that he and three generations of his ancestors
had been born in the United States, was deported to Mexico, because he could
not produce his birth certificate. One can clearly see here how this man’s non-
whiteness prevented him from being perceived as an American. This would never
happen to the great-grandson of an Irish immigrant, for his American-ness would
not be put into question.
The fact that Hispanicity is associated with foreignness can also be seen in
questions Latinos often get about their origins. Many U.S.-born Latinos and Latinas
report that when they are asked where they are from, the answer California or
Texas only begets the well-known follow-up: “But, where are you really from?”1
While Alba and Nee (1997) acknowledge that assimilation can involve becoming
a white or a black American, it is not clear that these options are available for all
immigrants from Latin America, for all Puerto Ricans or for all Chicanos/as, since
many of these people see themselves as neither white nor black (Rodriguez
2000). Many of the aforementioned immigration scholars acknowledge that race
plays a role in the process of immigration, yet none have specifically addressed
the relationship between Latinos/as’ racial status, experiences of discrimination,
and the varying paths of assimilations for Latinos and Latinas.
32 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
5,538 miles between Seattle, Washington and La Paz, Bolivia, and 6,885 miles
between Seattle and Buenos Aires. Again, geographic proximity (or lack thereof)
contributes to the diversity of the Latino community in the United States.
What is absent in the aforementioned theories of assimilation is a more
comprehensive understanding of the racialization of Hispanics in the United States,
and of how this racialization affects Hispanics’ paths of assimilation. The question
that I will address in detail is the extent to which the experiences that Hispanics
have that teach them that they are not Americans affect the process of ethnic
identification. This involves the recognition that not all Hispanics have the same
experiences in the United States. One important way in which their experiences
vary is based on their perceived racial status here in the United States.
In contemporary U.S. society, we learn our racial place through interactions
with others. If others classify us as white, we learn to expect preferential
treatment. If others classify us as something other than white, we learn to expect
marginalization. This marginalization plays out in different ways, depending on a
wide variety of factors, including, but not limited to, skin color, manner of speaking,
body language, hair texture and facial features. There is clearly not a “monolithic
minority” (Vaca 2004) experience; people of color experience marginalization in
distinct ways. There has been little research on how racism works in different
ways for blacks and Latinos in the United States. Nevertheless, it is clear from
current research that Latinos experience different forms of oppression, according
to whether or not they are perceived to be white, black or Hispanic. Turnovksy
(2004), for example, recounts that black Panamanians had to perform Latinidad
in order to be deemed eligible for day labor position (and not to be confused with
African-Americans), while Ecuadorians that were mistaken for Mexicans were
presumed to be hard-working and willing to work for low pay. Aranda and Rebollo-
Gil (2004) tell readers that their phenotypically white Puerto Rican informants
often were met with surprise when they informed people that they were Puerto
Rican. Some of these white Puerto Ricans have the option of passing for white,
while others did not because of their accent or forms of expressiveness. These
and other studies show that only phenotypically white people born in the United
States who speak Standard Received English and don’t move their hands too
much can call themselves unhyphenated Americans without this label being
questioned by others.
It is important to point out that, despite the fact that external categorizations
affect identity (Nagel 1994, Jenkins 1994), each individual has the ability to
accept, embrace or reject these categorizations. For example, Aranda and
Rebollo-Gil’s (2004) informants rejected others’ assumptions that they were
white, and insisted that they were Puerto Rican. Likewise, Turnovksy’s (2004)
Panamanian informants rejected others’ labeling of them as black by emphasizing
their non-African-American ethnic attributes. These and other studies also show
that people’s categorizations are contextual. Some people may be alternatively
categorized as black, Latino or Dominican in distinct contexts. In addition, some
individuals know how to manage these categorizations such that they have some
control over how they are categorized. In any case, whether people choose to
accept, embrace or manipulate their categorizations, these categorizations have
34 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
an effect on how individuals think of themselves and how they understand their
social location. In this article, I argue that Latinos who are categorized as non-
white are more likely to experience discrimination. I am further arguing that many
of these Latinos will interpret this discrimination as an indication that they are not
welcome in white American spaces, and that they are thus more likely to reject
the label “American” as a self-identifier.
Racialized Assimilation
The term, Hispanic, refers to persons of Latin American, Chicano or Puerto Rican
descent who live in the United States. It is important to note that the Hispanic
label does not explicitly imply belonging to a particular racial group. In fact,
Hispanics in the United States are a racially diverse group of people (Rodríguez
2000). We know that individuals in the United States are treated differently on
the basis of their perceived race (Tuan 1998). As such, it is reasonable to expect
that not all Hispanics receive the same treatment here in the United States. Other
scholars have documented this. For example, Clara Rodríguez found that many
dark-skinned Dominicans in New York recognize that fellow New Yorkers view and
treat them as black and not as Hispanic (2000:140-1). Ginetta Candelario (2001)
reported that the majority of Dominicans in the primarily black city of Washington,
D.C. racially identified themselves as black, because they are considered to be
black by others. Steven Ropp tells us that Asian Latinos are usually treated as
Asians, and not as Latinos/as in daily interactions (2000:24). Because not all
Puerto Ricans, Chicanos, Latinos and other immigrants from Latin America fit
the prevailing stereotype of what Hispanics are supposed to look or act like,
Hispanicity can become an “ethnic option” (Waters 1999) for white, black and
Asian Hispanics.
Despite the fact that “Hispanic” is officially an ethnic label, it functions in
some ways as a racial label. In other words, not unlike the labels, Asian and
black, the label Hispanic is often assigned to people on the basis of their physical
appearance. When people discriminate against blacks because of their race,
they make the assumption that their skin color entails that they have certain
cultural characteristics (i.e., that they like to eat fried chicken or that they enjoy
rap music). The same process occurs with Latinos who fit into the somatic image
most people in the United States have of Latinos. For these Latinos, people in
the United States might assume that they are willing to work for low pay or
that they are undocumented immigrants. Latinos who do not fit the mestizo/
mulatto image that people in the United States have of Latinos are more likely to
experience ethnic than racial discrimination as Latinos. This could be based on
their surname or any accent they may have when speaking English.
Contrary to arguments made by Aranda and Rebollo-Gil (2005), I would argue
that Latinos who do not look Latino do not experience racism for their Latinidad,
while they may experience ethnic discrimination. This is because, while ethnic
and racial labels are both social constructions, ethnicity invokes a language of
place while race invokes a language of phenotype (Wade 1999). The distinction
here is that ethnic characteristics can be expected to dissipate over the course
of generations, while racial characteristics are more likely to persist across
Latino(a)-American through Racialized Assimilation • 35
generations, especially when there are racially endogamous unions. The ethnic
label Hispanic refers to people whose geographic origins lay south of the Rio
Grande, and is applied based on cultural characteristics while the racial label,
Hispanic, is applied based on phenotype to people who look like they have Latin
American ancestry, according to stereotypes that exist in the North American
imaginary. The way this plays out in daily life is that Latin Americans and their
descendants with an Indian/mestizo phenotype, or that appear to be mixed-
race are more likely to be labeled as Hispanic than their European-descended
or African-descended counterparts who look white or black (Lopez and Stanton-
Salazar 2001). Moreover, as a result of this racialization, some Latin Americans
are beginning to recognize a commonality here in the United States and are
themselves taking on the label, Hispanic or Latino.
Discrimination occurs when Latinos can be ethnically or racially classified
as Latinos, but racial discrimination is more likely to affect Latinos who fit the
Hispanic somatic norm image, regardless of their level of assimilation. Moreover,
Hispanics’ perceived racial classification is a fundamental part of the process
of assimilation. The United States is a country where one’s perceived race
often outweighs one’s class, gender or even nativity status in determining how
individuals are treated on a daily basis (Feagin 2000, Tuan 1998, Waters 1999).
Because Hispanics belong to different racial groups, it is reasonable to expect
that not all Hispanics will be treated equally. Hispanics who are viewed as white
in the United States are less likely to face racial discrimination and more likely to
follow a similar path of assimilation to that of Irish, Italian or Polish Americans. In
other words, they will become Americans, perhaps with a symbolic attachment
to their national origins. However, Hispanics who are perceived to be black in
the United States are likely to face discrimination as other African-Americans do,
and to develop an oppositional identity as African-Americans. On the other hand,
those Hispanics who have the racial and cultural features that result in their being
perceived as Hispanics are less likely to assimilate and adopt an identity as an
American, and more likely to develop a hyphenated identity as Latino or Latina
Americans. This idea that racial status plays a key role in immigrant adaptation is
central to the concept of racialized assimilation.
As such, I expect to find in my analyses that Latino/a Americans who face
discrimination here in the United States are less likely to adopt the ethnic label
American than those who do not experience discrimination. I further expect
darker-skinned Hispanics and Hispanics who have experienced discrimination in
the United States to be more likely to self-identify as Hispanics or Latinos/as than
as Americans because they view that label as reserved for white Americans.
were 61.2 percent of the Hispanic population, Puerto Ricans were 12.1 percent,
and Cubans 4.8 percent.2 They accounted for 78.1 percent of the Hispanics in
the United States in 1990. It is conceivable that the findings discussed in this
paper are specific to these three national-origin groups and not to all Hispanics,
but I believe that my conclusions are applicable for Hispanics from other national
origin groups. This is because when Hispanics face discrimination in the United
States, it is often because they are categorized as Hispanic not as a particular
nationality and presumed to share the characteristics associated with Hispanics.
It is likely that people in the United States who discriminate against Hispanics are
not able to distinguish between a Mexican and a Guatemalan, or a Puerto Rican
and a Dominican, or even between a Bolivian and a Cuban.
The LNPS includes interviewer-coded skin color; the respondents were
all adults; and it is nationally representative of the Puerto Rican, Mexican and
Cuban populations in the United States in 1989. This data set is particularly well
suited to address the questions posed in this paper because of the broad sample
of Hispanics from all over the country, and of different generational statuses.
In addition to the representative sample population of the LNPS, I was also
interested in the unique data on interviewer-coded skin color.
The Latino National Political Survey (LNPS) was conducted in 40 Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Areas, and is representative of 91 percent of the Mexican,
Puerto Rican and Cuban populations in the United States. All respondents are at
least 18 years of age, and have at least one parent who is solely of Mexican,
Cuban or Puerto Rican ancestry, or at least two grandparents who are. The overall
response rate for Latinos/as was 74 percent. The LNPS includes 1,546 Mexicans,
589 Puerto Ricans and 682 Cubans. Latinos/as who lived in states that were
either less than 5 percent Latino or who lived in communities that were less than
3 percent Latino in 1989 were not included in the sampling universe. Interviews
were conducted in Spanish and English by bilingual interviewers. 3
Of the respondents in the LNPS dataset, 64 percent were first generation
immigrants, 21 percent were second generation, and 14 percent were third
generation. Among the first generation respondents, the average age at
immigration was 24 years. Sixty-three percent of the respondents were U.S.
Citizens, and 41 percent had completed high school. Eleven percent of the
respondents only spoke English at home, and 90 percent agreed or strongly
agreed that citizens of the United States should learn English. The descriptive
statistics for the variables used in the analyses are presented in Table 1.
Table 1: Descriptive Statistics for Variables Used in Analyses, 1989 Latino National Political Survey
Variable Name Percentage Observations
Dependent Variable: Ethnic Self Identification
American 16.56 462
Hispanic, Latino, Hispano or Spanish 38.42 1,072
Chicano, Nuyorican, Mexican-American, 8.49 237
Spanish-American, Cuban-American, Raza
Mexican(o), Cuban or Puerto Rican 36.52 1,019
Dichotomous Independent Variables
Female 58.28 1636
Male 41.72 1171
R owns home 32.61 914
R rents or lives with others 67.39 1889
R has experienced discrimination 27.65 776
R has not experienced discrimination 72.35 2,031
Multi-category Independent Variables
National Origin (Ref: Cuban)
Cuban 24.12 677
Puerto Rican 20.95 588
Mexican 54.90 1541
Generational Status (Ref: Came to the U.S. after age 18)
After age 18 43.50 1221
Before age 10 9.05 254
Between 11 and 17 11.86 333
Second Generation 21.34 599
Third or Fourth Generation 14.25 400
Educational Attainment (Ref: Less than High School)
Less than High School 56.08 1458
High School Graduate 22.31 580
Some College 14.96 389
College Graduate 6.65 173
Language Use (Ref: Spanish Dominant)
Spanish Dominant 36.41 1021
English Dominant 11.38 319
Bilingual 52.21 1464
Spouse's Ethnicity (Ref: Latino/a Spouse)
Latino/a Spouse 46.75 1309
No Spouse 43.25 1211
Anglo Spouse 5.82 163
Other Spouse 4.18 117
Interviewer-coded Skin Color (Ref: Light or Very Light)
Light or Very Light 47.31 1328
Medium 35.34 992
Dark 14.57 409
Very Dark 2.10 59
Annual Household Income (Ref: Less than $20,000)
Less than $20,000 57.35 1,491
Between $20,000 and $34,999 24.54 638
More than $35,000 18.12 471
38 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
Table 2: Descriptive Statistics for Variables Used from 2002 National Survey of Latinos Data
Variable Name Percentage Observations
Dependent Variables
Self-identifies as American 54.66 1589
Does not self-identify as American 45.34 1318
Self-identifies as Latino or Latina 80.75 2358
Does not self-identify as Latino or Latina 19.25 562
Self-identifies as National Origin 88.24 2537
Does not self-identify with National Origin 11.76 338
American identity is most important 20.27 578
American identity is not most important 79.73 2273
Dichotomous Independent Variables
Female 56.13 1644
Male 43.87 1285
R owns home 38.51 1128
R rents or lives with others 61.49 1801
R has experienced discrimination 61.69 1807
R has not experienced discrimination 38.31 1122
R is married or co-habiting 59.97 1750
R is not married or co-habiting 40.03 1168
Multicategory Independent Variables
National Origin (Ref: Other Countries)
Other Countries 38.10 1116
Puerto Rican 10.82 317
Mexican 35.75 1,047
Colombian 7.31 214
Dominican Republic 8.02 235
Generational Status (Ref: Came to the US after age 18)
After age 18 48.12 1,292
Before age 10 7.15 192
Between 11 and 17 11.66 313
Second Generation 19.59 526
Third or Fourth Generation 13.48 362
Educational Attainment (Ref: Less than High School)
Less than High School 31.63 920
High School Graduate 31.59 919
Some College 17.88 520
College Graduate 18.91 550
Language Use (Ref: Spanish Dominant)
Spanish Dominant 44.68 1309
English Dominant 23.45 687
Bilingual 31.86 933
Annual Household Income (Ref: Household Income less than $30,000)
Less than $30,000 50.99 1439
Between $30,000 and $49,999 26.29 649
More than $50,000 22.72 561
40 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
Table 3: Cross
Table TabsTabs
3: Cross from 2002
fromNational Survey ofSurvey
2002 National Latinos Data
y of
f Latinos Data
Table 3a: Row Percentages of Self-identity as American by Generational Status
Self-identifies as American
Yes No Total N
Immigrated age 18 or older 32.00 68.00 1278
Immigrated age 11 to 17 36.54 63.46 312
Immigrated before age 10 61.90 38.10 189
Born in the United States 85.55 14.45 526
R and parents born in the United States 96.95 3.05 361
Total Responses 59.60 49.44 2666
Hispano being most popular in New Mexico, Hispanic in rural areas, and Latino
in large cities (Melville 1988). Without ignoring the relevant literature on the
distinction between these pan-ethnic labels (Oboler 1995; Melville 1988), I have
chosen to concentrate on the characteristic they share – that of a recognition of
a shared experience with other persons of Latin American descent. The adoption
of a pan-ethnic label is a decision based on racialized experiences here in the
United States. Adoption of one of these pan-ethnic labels is a process that most
likely occurs in the United States because these labels are not commonly used
in Latin America.
The next category is that of hyphenated American categories. These labels are
distinct from pan-ethnic labels, as they indicate an association with a particular
national origin, and not necessarily with other Hispanics. This category includes
labels such Chicano, Nuyorican and Cuban-American. Like pan-ethnic labels,
these are identifications specific to the United States, and thus indicate a step in
the assimilation process. While they signify the recognition of a commonality of
experiences with others that share one’s national origin, they do not indicate an
allegiance to Latin Americans from other countries. For example, self-identifying
as Chicano indicates solidarity with people of Mexican descent who live in the
United States, but does not necessarily signify solidarity with immigrants from
Bolivia or the Dominican Republic. The label, Latino, on the other hand would
encompass immigrants from Argentina to Venezuela to Mexico.
The final category is national origin. This includes those respondents who
did not choose an American or an American-made ethnic identification. They
identified as Mexican(o), Cuban, Puerto Rican or Spanish.
two dummy variables are Second Generation and Third Generation immigrants.
Second generation means the respondent’s parents were born abroad, but the
respondent was born in the United States. Third generation means the respondent
and his or her parents were born in the United States.
Language use is based on the question: “What language do you usually speak
at home?” This is coded into three categories. The reference category is if the
respondent speaks mostly or exclusively Spanish at home. The three included
categories are speaking only or mostly English at home, and speaking Spanish
and English equally at home. Spouse’s ethnicity is based on the question: “Is
your spouse/the person you live with Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, other Latino
origin, Anglo or some other origin?” In the analyses, a Latino/a, Mexican, Puerto
Rican or Cuban spouse is the reference category. I have included three other
dummy variables: No spouse, Anglo spouse or other spouse.
The variable for discrimination is coded as 1 if the respondent reports that he
or she has experienced discrimination, and 0 otherwise. This variable is based
on the question: “Because you are a Cuban [Mexican, or Puerto Rican] have you
ever been turned down as a renter or a buyer of a home, or been treated rudely
in a restaurant, or been denied a job, or experienced other important kinds of
discrimination?”
The variable for skin color is based on the interviewer’s coding of the
respondent’s skin color. The interviewer reported whether the respondent was:
Very Light, Light, Medium, Dark or Very Dark. This is a categorical variable.
The reference category included Light and Very Light. I combined these two
categories under the presumption that they are more likely to be able to pass for
white than the other respondents. The two included categories are Medium and
Dark or Very Dark. Dark and Very Dark are combined because of the small n of
Very Dark (n = 59).
In the entire 1989 LNPS survey, only 52 of the 2,800 respondents self-
identified as black. However, 156 of the 2,893 respondents in the 2002 NLS
survey self-identified as black. Overall, self-identified blacks were less likely than
self-identified whites to ethnically identify as American or as Hispanic or Latino,
and more likely to identify with their national origin.
Results
Table 5: Beta Coefficients from 1989 LNPS logistic Regression on Self-ID as American
g g
Coefficient Standard Error
Female (Ref: Male) -.319*** (.12)
National Origin (Ref: Cuban)
Mexican -1.294*** (.19)
Puerto Rican -.197 (.19)
Annual Household Income (Ref: less than $20,000)
Between $20,000 and $34,999 -.154 (.15)
More than $35,000 .297* (.17)
R owns home .238* (.13)
Educational Attainment (Ref: Less than High School)
High School Graduate .371** (.14)
Some College .388** (.17)
College Graduate .495** (.23)
Spouse's Ethnicity (Ref: Latino/a Spouse)
No Spouse -.098 (.14)
Anglo Spouse .409* (.22)
Other Spouse -.271 (.28)
Generational Status (Ref: Came to the U.S. after age 18)
Before age 10 .247 (.25)
Between 11 and 17 -.288 (.29)
Second Generation 1.709*** (.23)
Third or Fourth Generation 2.333*** (.25)
Language Use (Ref: Spanish Dominant)
English Dominant .857*** (.25)
Bilingual .356* (.19)
R has experienced discrimination -.281** (.13)
Interviewer-coded skin color (Ref: Light or Very Light)
Medium -.231* (.13)
Dark -.322* (.18)
Constant -1.957*** (.19)
Observations 2585
identifier. In fact, respondents with dark or very dark skin were 83 percent more
likely to self-identify with their national origin label. The combination of these
findings implies that experiences of discrimination compel some Hispanics to
take on a politicized pan-ethnic label, while darker-skinned Hispanics are less
likely to leave behind their national origin labels and adopt any labels in the United
States. They also indicate that experiences of discrimination and darker skin color
affect the assimilation paths for Hispanics.
Looking closely at Table 6, it becomes evident that women and Mexicans are
the least likely to adopt any new labels in the United States and are the most likely
to continue to use their national origin as an identifier. In contrast, the respondents
who have been in the United States for longer, who primarily speak English, who
own their own homes, and who have more education are more likely to take on
another identifier here in the United States. The finding that immigrants who are
more socially and culturally assimilated are more likely to take on Americanized
identifiers provides support for my argument that self-labels are indicators of
assimilation. By the same token, the finding that darker-skinned respondents are
the most likely to not take on an identifier in the United States indicates that dark
skin may be an impediment to assimilation for Hispanics.
Table 6: Beta Coefficients from 1989 LNPS Multinomial Logistic Regression on Ethnic Self-ID
Hispanic Hyph. Amer. Natl. Origin
Female (Ref: Male) .357*** .209 .310**
(.13) (.18) (.14)
National Origin (Ref: Cuban)
Mexican 1.266*** 1.807*** 1.028***
(.20) (.37) (.21)
Puerto Rican .552*** -.726 -.243
(.20) (.50) (.21)
Annual Household Income (Ref: Household Income less than $20,000)
Between $20,000 and 34,999 .108 .186 .197
(.16) (.22) (.17)
More than $35,000 .303 .317 .282
(.18) (.25) (.21)
R owns home -.368*** .199 -.416***
(.14) (.19) (.16)
Educational Attainment (Ref: Less than High School)
High School Graduate -.115 -.377 -.812***
(.16) (.22) (.18)
Some College -.218 -.255 -.781***
(.18) (.25) (.21)
College Graduate -.313 -.808** -.513*
(.25) (.40) (.28)
Spouse's Ethnicity (Ref: Latino/a Spouse)
No Spouse .090 -.071 .130
(.15) (.21) (.16)
Anglo Spouse -.439 -.582* -.221
(.26) (.33) (.32)
Other Spouse .127 .357 .346
(.31) (.41) (.35)
Generational Status (Ref: Came to the U.S. after age 18)
Before age 10 .017 -.219 -.532*
(.26) (.70) (.27)
Between 11 and 17 .419 .808 .186
(.30) (.55) (.30)
Second Generation -1.465*** 1.096*** -2.754***
(.21) (.39) (.24)
Third or Fourth Generation -1.903*** .364 -4.339***
(.25) (.42) (.34)
Language Use (Ref: Spanish Dominant)
English Dominant -.943*** -.530 -.781**
(.27) (.41) (.32)
Bilingual -.176 -.270 -.515***
(.20) (.35) (.20)
R has experienced discrimination .255* .374* .241
(.14) (.19) (.16)
Interviewer-coded skin color (Ref: Light or Very Light)
Medium .167 .272 .330**
(.14) (.20) (.16)
Dark .233 .113 .607***
(.20) (.26) (.21)
Constant .869*** -2.622*** 1.717***
(.21) (.43) (.22)
Observations 2570 2570 2570
Standard errors in parentheses.
*** significant at = .01 (two-tailed); **significant at =.05 (two-tailed) * significant at =.05
(one-tailed)
Table 7: 2002 National Survey of Latinos: Beta Coefficients from Four Logistic Regressions on Ethnic Self-Identification?
S d
Regression 1 Regression 2 Regression 3 Regression 4
American
American Latino National Origin Most Important
Female -.234* .195 .028 -.398**
(.10) (.11) (.14) (.12)
National Origin (Ref: Other Countries)
Puerto Rican .781** .780** .865** -.497**
(.19) (.19) (.24) (.19)
Mexican -.436** .438** .459** -.577**
(.12) (.13) (.17) (.15)
Colombian -.203* .411 .220 -.533*
(.19) (.24) (.31) (.30)
Dominican Republic .055 .950** .510 -.800*
(.19) (.30) (.36) (.34)
Generational Status (Ref: Came to the US after 18)
Before age 10 .496* .210 .333 .066
(.20) (.23) (.34) (.26)
Between 11 and 17 .028 .273 -.022 -.493*
(.16) (.21) (.30) (.30)
Second Generation 1.607** .272 -.85** 1.098**
(.18) (.18) (.22) (.18)
Third or Fourth Generation 3.015** .269 -1.537** 1.863**
(.34) (.20) (.25) (.21)
Educational Attainment (Ref: Less than High School)
High School Graduate -.066 .185 .134 .027
(.13) (.16) (.23) (.20)
Some College .071 -.248 -.569* .764**
(.15) (.17) (.22) (.19)
College Graduate .188 -.024 -.849** .507*
(.16) (.18) (.24) (.21)
Latino(a)-American through Racialized Assimilation • 49
Table 7 (continued)
S d
Regression 1 Regression 2 Regression 3 Regression 4
Annual Household Income (Ref: Less than $30,000)
Between $30,000 & $49,999 .346** .202 -.071 -.016
(.13) (.14) (.18) (.16)
More than $50,000 .388* -.092 .209 .139
(.16) (.16) (.20) (.17)
R is married or co-habiting -.32** .166 .104 -.030
(.11) (.12) (.15) (.13)
R owns home .504** -.146 -.037 .167
(.11) (.12) (.15) (.13)
Language Use (Ref:Spanish Dominant)
English Dominant 1.225** -1.665** -1.285** 1.895**
(.19) (.199) (.28) (.24)
Bilingual .673** -.426* -.834** 1.176**
(.14) (.17) (.25) (.22)
R has experienced discrimination -.210* .281* .053 -.48**
(.10) (.11) (.14) (.13)
Constant -.625** 1.346** 3.22** -2.671**
50 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
Conclusion
This article demonstrates the false nature of claims made by white nationalist
groups that Latinos/as refuse to assimilate or to become Americans. As it turns out
some Latinos/as are becoming Americans. However, those Latinos/as who face
discrimination and othering on a daily basis are learning that they are not viewed
as equals in this country. Despite their official citizenship in the United States,
many Latinos/as feel unwelcome here. The rejection of the label American and the
embracing of the Latino label is a response to this discrimination and exclusion.
This research demonstrates that experiences of discrimination discourage
immigrants from Latin America and their children from self-identifying as
American despite the fact that many of these immigrants and their children are
U.S. citizens. The finding that respondents who have experienced discrimination
are less likely to self-identify as American indicates that the decision of people
born in the United States not to describe themselves as American is a decision
made in light of experiences of exclusion here in the United States. I have argued
that this exclusion is part of racism in U.S. society, and is due to the implicit
whiteness in the label American.
This paper also elucidates the diversity of experiences and assimilation
patterns for Latinos/as in the United States. Some Latinos/as are holding onto
their national origin identifiers and refusing to hyphenate themselves, even in
the third generation. Others are taking on a hyphenated American identity, and
still others are assuming the pan-ethnic label. Which path these individuals
take depends on their experiences in the United States. Those Latinos/as who
appear ‘white’ and do not face discrimination are more likely to assimilate into
52 • Social Forces Volume 85, Number 1 • September 2006
U.S. society and become unhyphenated Americans. They, like immigrants from
Europe, can disappear unnoticed into the melting pot, if they so choose.
However, those Latinos/as who face discrimination and who are not perceived
to be white are less likely to be viewed by others, and consequently by themselves,
as Americans. Yet, even if Latinos/as born in the United States are not Americans,
they are also not Mexicans or Cubans, since they are also viewed as foreigners in
Mexico or Cuba. Latin Americans and their descendants in the United States have
responded to this denial of full citizenship by fostering a new ethnic identity that
recognizes their shared experiences of discrimination and exclusion in the United
States. This new identity is that of Latino and Latina Americans. This identity is, of
course, enriched and fueled by Latino political activism and cultural production.
Both political and cultural leaders encourage Hispanics to see themselves as part
of a larger political and cultural community, composed of immigrants from all
countries in Latin America, as well as Puerto Ricans and Chicanos.
Nevertheless, it is worth asking how long the idea that to be American entails
being of exclusively European descent can last. Scholars such as Yancey (2003)
contend that the boundaries of whiteness will expand to include Hispanics and
Asians. Others such as Bonilla-Silva (2002) argue that many Hispanics will join
the “collective black,”’ yet a few will become honorary whites. From where we
stand today, the future racial status of Latin Americans and their descendants is
unclear. What is clear is that many Hispanics are getting the message that they
are not full citizens of this nation, and are responding by clinging onto ethnic
labels. As such, the “twilight of ethnicity” (Alba 1985) is unlikely to precede the
twilight of racism.
Notes
1. Reports of this were found on several websites written by Latinas or
Latinos. Some of these were: “I am a proud morena Chicana but the
questions posed to me most often are, ‘Where are you from?’” from:
http://www.hispanicmagazine.com/2001/julaug/Letters/ (accessed 5/24/2005
5:40 p.m.). “I was at the nail salon the other day and the manicurist asked me
where I was from, I replied, “From Brownsville. Then she asks, “No but where
are you really from?” Then I said, ‘Well my parents are Mexican.’” From:
http://dailytexican.blogspot.com/2004/08/soy-chicana-y-no-estes-chingando.html
(accessed 5/24/2005 5:41 p.m.) “People ask, “Where are you from?” And when
you say, “New York” or “Idaho,” they insist, “No, but where are you really from?”
– meaning, why are your eyes so dark or your skin so (pick one) brown, black, cin-
namon, white, tan?” from: http://juantornoe.blogs.com/ hispanictrending/books/
(accessed: 5/24/2005 5:42 p.m.).
United States. To ensure that Spanish was not being used as a national-origin
identifier, I looked at the self-reported ancestry of respondents who self-iden-
tified as Spanish. I found that only 41 of the 327 respondents who self-iden-
tified as Spanish actually reported having a mother, father, grandmother or
grandfather from Spain.
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