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Accounting for ethnic and racial diversity: the challenge of enumeration.

2013

Edition : Routledge 

  • Accounting for ethnic and racial diversity: the challenge of enumeration Patrick Simon & Victor Piché 
  • Collecting ethnic statistics in Europe: a review Patrick Simon 
  • Group self-determination, individual rights, or social inclusion? Competing frames for ethnic counting in Hungary Andrea Krizsán 
  • Making (mixed-)race: census politics and the emergence of multiracial multiculturalism in the United States, Great Britain and Canada Debra Thompson 
  • Re-making the majority? Ethnic New Zealanders in the 2006 census Tahu Kukutai & Robert Didham 
  • Used for ill; used for good: a century of collecting data on race in South Africa Tom A. Moultrie & Rob E. Dorrington 
  • Brazil in black and white? Race categories, the census, and the study of inequality Mara Loveman, Jeronimo O. Muniz & Stanley R. Bailey 
  • Capturing complexity in the United States: which aspects of race matter and when? Aliya Saperstein 
Collected historically with a view to dominating and classifying populations, ethnic statistics are now in demand from international human rights organizations and are used to devise policies for combating discrimination and racism. Intended for comparative purposes, this special issue reviews data collection issues and practices as well as the methodological and epistemological questions raised in Europe, South Africa, New Zealand, Hungary, Canada, Great Britain, Brazil and the United States.

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