WASHINGTON — Interracial marriages in the U.S. have climbed to 4.8
million — a record 1 in 12 — as a steady flow of new Asian and Hispanic
immigrants expands the pool of prospective spouses. African-Americans
are now substantially more likely than before to marry whites.
A Pew Research Center study, released today, details a diversifying
America where interracial unions and the mixed-race children they
produce are challenging typical notions of race.
“The rise in interracial marriage indicates that race relations have
improved over the past quarter century,” said Daniel Lichter, a
sociology professor at Cornell University. “Mixed-race children have
blurred America’s color line. They often interact with others on either
side of the racial divide and frequently serve as brokers between
friends and family members of different racial backgrounds,” he said.
The figures come from previous censuses as well as the 2008-2010
American Community Survey, which surveys 3 million households annually.
The figures for “white” refer to whites who are not of Hispanic
ethnicity. For purposes of defining interracial marriages, Hispanic is
counted as a race by many in the demographic field.
The study finds that 8.4 percent of all current U.S. marriages are
interracial, up from 3.2 percent in 1980. While Hispanics and Asians
remained the most likely, as in previous decades, to marry someone of a
different race, the biggest jump in share since 2008 occurred among
African-Americans, who historically have been the most segregated.
States in the West where Asian and Hispanic immigrants are more
numerous, including Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico and California, were
among the most likely to have couples who “marry out” — more than 1 in
5. The West was followed by the South, Northeast and Midwest. By state,
mostly white Vermont had the lowest rate of intermarriage, at 4 percent.
In all, more than 15 percent of new marriages in 2010 were interracial.
The numbers also coincide with Pew survey data showing greater public
acceptance of mixed marriage, coming nearly half a century after the
Supreme Court in 1967 barred race-based restrictions on marriage. (In
2000, Alabama became the last state to lift its unenforceable ban on
interracial marriages.)
About 83 percent of Americans say it is “all right for blacks and
whites to date each other,” up from 48 percent in 1987. About 63 percent
of those surveyed say it “would be fine” if a family member were to
marry outside their own race.
Minorities, young adults, the higher educated and those living in
Western or Northeast states were more likely to say mixed marriages are a
change for the better for society. The figure was 61 percent for 18- to
29-year-olds, for instance, compared to 28 percent for those 65 and
older.
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