Department of Sociology, University of California Irvine, Irvine, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Jan 26;6(1):e15812. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015812.
Recent research suggests racial classification is responsive to social stereotypes, but how this affects racial classification in national vital statistics is unknown. This study examines whether cause of death influences racial classification on death certificates. We analyze the racial classifications from a nationally representative sample of death certificates and subsequent interviews with the decedents' next of kin and find notable discrepancies between the two racial classifications by cause of death. Cirrhosis decedents are more likely to be recorded as American Indian on their death certificates, and homicide victims are more likely to be recorded as Black; these results remain net of controls for followback survey racial classification, indicating that the relationship we reveal is not simply a restatement of the fact that these causes of death are more prevalent among certain groups. Our findings suggest that seemingly non-racial characteristics, such as cause of death, affect how people are racially perceived by others and thus shape U.S. official statistics.
最近的研究表明,种族分类对社会刻板印象有反应,但这如何影响国家生命统计中的种族分类尚不清楚。本研究考察了死因是否会影响死亡证明上的种族分类。我们分析了来自全国代表性死亡证明样本以及随后对死者近亲的访谈,发现死因之间的种族分类存在明显差异。肝硬化死者在死亡证明上更有可能被记录为美洲印第安人,而凶杀案受害者更有可能被记录为黑人;这些结果在排除后续调查种族分类的控制后仍然存在,表明我们揭示的关系不仅仅是这些死因在某些群体中更为普遍这一事实的重述。我们的研究结果表明,看似非种族特征,如死因,会影响人们被他人的种族认知,从而影响美国官方统计数据。