Multiracialism is a conceptual framework used to theorize and interpret identity formation in global multiracial populations. Multiracialism explores the tendency for multiracial individuals to identify with a third category of 'mixed-ness' as opposed to being a fully accepted member of multiple, or any, racial group(s).[1] As an analytical tool, multiracialism strives to emphasize that societies are increasingly composed of multiracial individuals, warranting a broader recognition of those who do not fit into a society's clear-cut notions of race. Additionally, multiracialism also focuses on what identity formation means in the context of oppressive histories and cultural erasure.[2]

U.S. Census Bureau survey section on race from 2010. This was the second time the United States allowed individuals to indicate more than one race on the census.

Multiracial identities have manifested themselves in many different ways across cultural identities, historical moments, and social norms. The meaning of what it is to be multiracial changes depending on what society is in question.[2] As a result, multiracialism is often used to critique the continuation of race as a means of social categorization, especially given that race is a social and political construct that has served systems of oppression and systematically overlooked large populations that fall between its limited categorizations.[3]

Conceptual history

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As argued by King et al. in Global Mixed Race, racial mixing and multiracial identities have existed for centuries. The emergence of multiracial identities in the United States is often attributed to the repeal of anti-miscegenation laws and the subsequent legalization of interracial marriages.[4] However, this has been disproven by documented histories of miscegenation in the United States beginning in the 17th and 18th centuries.[4] Furthermore, anti-miscegenation laws weren't established globally, problematizing the scope of this argument's relevance transnationally.[4] Instead, the emergence and growth of multiracial populations can be more accurately attributed to global and transnational phenomenon such as changes in trade patterns and migration flows as a result of historical events, colonization, and or globalization.[5]

Additionally, the application of multiracialism, as well as the size of a nation's multiracial population, will be unique across societies.[5] This can be attributed to the function of race as a social and political construct, one which was developed in order to more easily distribute resources and determine status within societies.[3] The nature of race as a construct leads to racial ideals adopting additional or contrary meaning across different societies.[5] Furthermore, the meaning societies associate with different racial groups evolves over time. Increased opportunities for interracial relationships and interaction are often attributed to what scholars Small and King-O’Riain would call tenants[spelling?] of globalization,[5] which provide opportunities for racial learning and a less hegemonic understanding of unfamiliar racial groups.[6] Small and King-O’Riain contend that globalization has opened new avenues for increasing hybridity and social acceptance of multiracial identities while recognizing that the nature of race as a construct means that these global conversations on racial ideals will ultimately manifest themselves differently across local contexts.[5]

Regional racial classification

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Brazil

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The colonial history of Brazil established the framework for the system of racial hierarchy present in the nation today. Colonial ties to Portugal provided the opportunity for European racial ideals to enter Brazil and establish Eurocentric racial projects. One of the most impactful social influences established by Portugal was the incorporation of Brazil into the African slave trade. This industry was extensive, leading Brazil to be considered one of the two largest slaveholding nations in the Americas[7] with records showing that Brazil imported ten times as many slaves as the USA,[8] and estimates holding that approximately 3.6 million Africans were brought to Brazil during the three and a half centuries of Portuguese rule.[9] Not only did these circumstances lead to the circulation of racial ideology, but they also constructed a unique racial distribution within Brazil.

Despite a lack of data during the early colonial period, scholars widely accept that white settlers in Brazil made up a minority of the population throughout this era. In 1600, the white residents in Brazil amounted to merely one third of the population, and estimates show that by 1798 the population of 3 million was composed of around 1,000,000 white Brazilians, 1,500,000 slaves, 225,000 Freed Coloreds (typically individuals of multiracial heritage), and 250,000 Native Americans.[7]

The increasing number of Africans in Brazil led to this population supplementing and eventually replacing the Native American labor force.[7] These three categories—European, African, and Native American—were placed within a racial hierarchy established around a Eurocentric agenda;[7] the particular system implemented in Brazil was known as the ternary racial project, which was popularized by anthropologist Gilberto Freyre.[7] This system was established in order to validate the nation's extensive miscegenation practices, creating three categories of classification: white, multiracial, and black. Brazil never passed anti-miscegenation laws, and instead, viewed miscegenation as a means to slowly whiten the Brazilian population.[8] But focusing on this lack of legalized racial discrimination resulted in the misconception that Brazilian society was also free of racism, a concept known as "racial democracy" wherein Brazil was free of discrimination such as segregation and racial violence.[9] The theory of "racial democracy" was further developed in the 1930s as a means to reconcile nationalist anti-immigration sentiment, the perceived failure of the state initiative to whiten Brazil, and the growing multiracial population.[9] Freyre interpreted Brazil's mixed-race population as being the defining characteristic of Brazil: a country where one could live in a harmonious, multiracial society.[9]

In line with this agenda, social status in Brazil was not exclusively determined by race; instead, it can be argued that an individual's social identity is more impacted by physical appearances in combination with class and cultural practices.[7] By creating a third category in the ternary system, multiracial individuals were given more vertical social mobility than Brazilians of African descent.[7] However, multiracial identities were further stratified, with the order of desirability being as follows: mamelincos (European and Native American), mulatto (European with either Native American or African), and catusos (Native American and African); wherein mamelincos and mulatto identities had more opportunities for mobility than those of catusos heritage.[7]

Further effects of the ternary system are seen in how Brazilian slave holders incorporated the population of Freed Coloreds, typically mulattos, as enforcers of the racial hierarchy.[7] By buying into the enforcement of the status quo, multiracial individuals were emplacing themselves in this system—both as superior to black Brazilians and complacent as second-class citizens to white Brazilians.[7] This is further explained through the “mulatto escape hatch”, wherein individuals who were visibility of mixed heritage would be granted situational permission to identify as white due to their talents and assets such as education level or learned skills.[10] By employing this social strategy in the context of the ternary system, Brazilian elites were able to keep the most outspoken and skilled multiracial individuals from critiquing the unequal status quo.[10] Due to the operation of this racialized system, it became favorable for Brazilians to present themselves as belonging to Native American or European heritages[7] while simultaneously distancing themselves from African descendancy.[7]

Identity formation in Brazil although deeply rooted in the nation's colonial past has and continues to be confronted and changed. Evidence of this is seen in the 1970s through Brazil's Black Movement, as well as the counter movement in 2001 known as Brazil's Multiracial Movement.[10] These incidents among other modern developments in Brazilian politics have led to the shifting of racial discourse in the nation.

Interviews conducted by the National Public Radio (NPR) in 2019 consulted Brazilians on their experiences with multiracialism in their nation and how this impacts self-identification. The focus of the report was on the affirmative action mandate established as federal law in Brazil during 2014. This policy enacted a quota wherein 20% of students accepted to federal universities and 20% of all employees working civil service jobs must be black.[8] By establishing benefits in the form of increased quality of education and financial security, NPR substantiated that the government of Brazil had provided the population with an incentive to (re)claim African heritage. And with such an extensive history of multiracial descendancy, it is difficult to visually determine whether an applicant is actually of African descent. Each individual who indicates black on these applications must be verified by the anti-fraud commission and determined to be black based upon facial features—a process which is informed by Brazilian society's tendency to prioritize appearance over heritage in terms of identity formulation.[8]

United States

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The colonial history of the United States has provided the basis for the nation's current race relations.[11] As European colonial empires expanded in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, European constructions of race were spread globally.[11] The concepts of race and racial hierarchies were developed as a means to justify emerging forms of exploitation during the colonial era.[11] These emerging social constructs provided a framework for societies to categorize individuals and subsequently place them within a hierarchy—typically seen with what is defined as ‘white’ at the top and ‘black’ at the bottom.[11] Professor of sociology, G. Reginald Daniel elaborates that these systems were ultimately constructed and employed as a means by which the practice of enslaving Africans could be defended.[11]

Slavery provided the context for the emergence of multiracial identities in colonial America as African slaves and European indentured servants formed interracial unions.[12] But the multiracial children of these relationships were perceived as a threat to the purity of the white race, and anti-miscegenation laws were promptly passed in the 1660s to preserve distinct racial categories.[12]

Further means of legitimizing the construct of race in the United States emerged in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century through what was known as racial science or scientific racism.[13] These ideologies were eventually disproven; however, at the time of their rise, they occupied a critical role in American scholarship's understanding and depiction of human beings.[13] Racial sciences gained additional credibility due to the illustrious reputations of the scholars who conceptualized the field, such as Louis Agassiz a leading member of the American School of Ethnology from Harvard University.[13]

Eurocentric frameworks brought to the United States through colonial ties led to the emergence of a binary racial project wherein ‘blackness’ and ‘whiteness’ are presented as opposite ends of a racial spectrum with no categories in between.[11] This limitation lends multiracial individuals to being perceived in relation to either extreme of the spectrum, and not as occupying the space between black and white despite how they personally identify.[11] This phenomenon can be further explained through the history of the one-drop rule, a means of racial categorization which emerged during the Jim Crow era in the American South.[12] In effect, the one-drop rule upheld that Americans with any African heritage would be considered fully black.[12] This policy barred multiracial descendants of black Americans from accessing the higher social statuses of their white family members, while also refusing to acknowledge the existence of multiracial identities.[12] Remnants of the one-drop rule are still evident today as multiracial Americans of African heritage are still often perceived as black instead of multiracial.[12]

 
U.S. Census Bureau survey section on race from 1990. Participants were only allowed to indicate one race from a limited set of options.

The Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s inspired discourse which dramatically changed the perception of multiracial identities in the United States.[12] In 1967, the Supreme Court Case Loving v. Virginia repealed all remaining anti-miscegenation laws, deeming these practices to be unconstitutional.[12] As a result, the 1970s saw a rise in biracial marriages, a trend which is still evident decades later.[12]

In the 2000 U.S. Census, Americans were able to self-identify as more than one racial group, marking the first time that multiracial identities were legally recognized by the United States.[14]  Calculations based on the U.S. Census Bureaus’ s 2005-2015 American Community Surveys and 2000 decennial census show that the number of individuals who identify as more than one race rose by 106 percent between 2000 and 2015.[14] Furthermore, a 2018 report from the U.S. Census Bureau projects that, if trends continue, the multiracial population will triple in size by 2060.[14]

With the rise of multiracial identities in the United States, multiracialism has become an increasingly popular framework. Scholars such as Lauren D. Davenport, a political science professor from Stanford University, are exploring how the increasing number of Americans self identifying as multiracial has the potential to impact political affiliations and minority solidarity.[14] Davenport stresses how this has raised serious concerns in the African American community, as multiracial individuals with black heritage have been instrumental in promoting the political agendas of the black community. The main concern is that growing solidarity among the multiracial community will lead to other minority groups losing impassioned support from a critical group of allies.[14] In fact, this is one of the reasons why the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the National Urban League saw the push for a multiracial category on the U.S. Census in 1990 as a threat to black solidarity.[14]

Additionally, multiracialism has been used to frame the expansion of the multiracial population as evidence of America becoming a post racial democracy.[4] The merging of races has been interpreted as evidence of incremental steps toward racial equality and social progress; however, the mixing of these identities has been occurring for centuries, and the social benefits of multiracialism have not been well researched or supported.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Mengel, Laurie M. (2015), "Triples – The Social Evolution of a Multiracial Panethnicity", Rethinking ‘Mixed Race’, Pluto Press, pp. 99–116, doi:10.2307/j.ctt18fsbsq.8, ISBN 9781849640688
  2. ^ a b Easterling, Paul (2017), "Biracial Butterflies: 21st Century Racial Identity in Popular Culture", Color Struck, SensePublishers, pp. 123–142, doi:10.1007/978-94-6351-110-0_6, ISBN 9789463511100
  3. ^ a b Martin, Lori Latrice (2017), "The Complexity of Color and the Religion of Whiteness", Color Struck, SensePublishers, pp. 179–196, doi:10.1007/978-94-6351-110-0_9, ISBN 9789463511100
  4. ^ a b c d e Mahtani, Minelle. (2015). Mixed Race Amnesia : Resisting the Romanticization of Multiraciality. University of British Columbia Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-2773-7. OCLC 910569392.
  5. ^ a b c d e King-O’Riain, Rebecca C.; Stephen, Small (2014-03-14), Global Mixed Race, NYU Press, pp. xiii–xvii, doi:10.18574/nyu/9780814770733.003.0012, ISBN 9780814770733
  6. ^ Lan, Shanshan (2019). "Reconstructing Blackness in Grassroots Interactions Between Chinese and Africans in Guangzhou" (PDF). Anthropological Quarterly. 92 (2): 481–508. doi:10.1353/anq.2019.0023. hdl:11245.1/95d75ea7-985e-46b4-8769-282af3f7f9b6. ISSN 1534-1518. S2CID 200056057.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Daniel, G. Reginald, 1949- (2006). Race and multiraciality in Brazil and the United States : converging paths?. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 9780271028842. OCLC 85789219.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b c d "Brazil In Black And White: Update". NPR.org. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  9. ^ a b c d Lovell, Peggy A. (1999). Development and the persistence of racial inequality in Brazil : 1950-1991. OCLC 822503235.
  10. ^ a b c Daniel, G. Reginald; Lee, Andrew Michael (2014-03-14). King-O'Riain, Rebecca Chiyoko (ed.). Competing Narratives: Race and Multiraciality in the Brazilian Racial Order. New York: NYU Press. ISBN 9780814770474. OCLC 870646867.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Daniel, G. Reginald. (2002). More Than Black Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order. Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1-56639-909-8. OCLC 1020173425.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Khanna, Nikki (2010). ""If You're Half Black, You're Just Black": Reflected Appraisals and the Persistence of the One-Drop Rule". The Sociological Quarterly. 51 (1): 96–121. doi:10.1111/j.1533-8525.2009.01162.x. ISSN 0038-0253. S2CID 145451803.
  13. ^ a b c Hooker, Juliet (2017). Theorizing race in the Americas : Douglass, Sarmiento, Du Bois, and Vasconcelos. New York, NY. ISBN 978-0-19-063369-1. OCLC 963914079.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ a b c d e f Davenport, Lauren 1983- VerfasserIn (2018-03-29). Politics beyond black and white biracial identity and attitudes in America. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-44433-0. OCLC 1044732652. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)