Paschel Tianna
AJS. 2014 Nov;120(3):864-907. doi: 10.1086/679252.
Comparative research on racial classification has often turned to Latin America, where race is thought to be particularly fluid. Using nationally representative data from the 2010 and 2012 America's Barometer survey, the authors examine patterns of self-identification in four countries. National differences in the relation between skin color, socioeconomic status, and race were found. Skin color predicts race closely in Panama but loosely in the Dominican Republic. Moreover, despite the dominant belief that money whitens, the authors discover that status polarizes (Brazil), mestizoizes (Colombia), darkens (Dominican Republic), or has no effect (Panama). The results show that race is both physical and cultural, with country variations in racial schema that reflect specific historical and political trajectories.
关于种族分类的比较研究常常聚焦于拉丁美洲,人们认为那里的种族情况尤其多变。作者利用2010年和2012年美国晴雨表调查中的全国代表性数据,考察了四个国家的自我认同模式。研究发现了肤色、社会经济地位和种族之间关系的国家差异。在巴拿马,肤色与种族的关联紧密,而在多米尼加共和国则较为松散。此外,尽管普遍认为金钱能使人变白,但作者发现社会地位会使种族两极分化(巴西)、产生混血化(哥伦比亚)、肤色变深(多米尼加共和国)或没有影响(巴拿马)。结果表明,种族既是生理的也是文化的,不同国家的种族模式存在差异,反映了特定的历史和政治轨迹。