User:PK2/Majority minority

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A majority-minority or minority-majority area is a term used to refer to a subdivision in which one or more racial and/or ethnic minorities (relative to the whole country's population) make up a majority of the local population.

While the concept exists in other nations, the exact term differs from place to place and language to language.

In many large, contiguous countries like China, there are many

autonomous regions
where a minority population is the majority. These regions are generally the result of historical population distributions, not because of recent immigration or recent differences in birth and fertility rates between various groups.

English-speaking countries

Australia

It is estimated that Europeans first outnumbered

Cumberland Council, are one of the largest non-Anglo-Celtic suburbs in Australia.[3]
Here is a list of the suburbs in Sydney's metropolitan area where non-Anglo-Celtic ethnic groups are the majority:

Canada

Visible minority majorities in different Canadian municipalities:

British Columbia

Ontario

New Zealand

South Africa

Whites as a percentage of the population in various parts of South Africa in 2011.

United Kingdom

United States

U.S. states and districts in which non-Hispanic whites are:
  Currently a minority or plurality
  Currently less than 60% of the population
  Were formerly a minority or plurality

In the United States of America, majority-minority area or minority-majority area is a term describing a

race and ethnicity in the United States Census). The term is often used in voting rights law to designate voting districts which are altered under the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to enable ethnic or language minorities "the opportunity to elect their candidate of choice."[14] In that context, the term is first used by the Supreme Court in 1977.[14] The Court had previously used the term in employment discrimination and labor relations cases.[15]

  • Five states are majority-minority as of 2016: Hawaii (which is the only state that has never had a white majority), New Mexico, California, Texas and Nevada.[16][17]
  • The District of Columbia reached a majority Black status during the latter stages of the Great Migration. Although the district is still majority-minority, Blacks made up only 44.4% of the population in 2018.[18] Increases have been among minorities who identify as Asians and Hispanics. Whites have also moved into the district in increasing numbers since the turn of the 21st century.[19]
  • The percentage of non-Hispanic white residents has fallen below 60% in Maryland (50.5% in 2018),[20] Georgia (52.4% in 2018),[21] Florida (53.5% in 2018),[22] Arizona, New York, New Jersey, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Maryland, at 50.5% non-Hispanic White as of 2018,[20] is on the verge of becoming majority minority.
  • All populated ) are majority-minority areas. They never had a non-Hispanic white majority.
  • As of 2012, 50
    metropolitan areas in the U.S. are majority-minority.[23]
  • As of 2015, 12% of U.S. counties are majority-minority.[24]
  • The whole of the United States is projected to become majority-minority by 2043 if current trends continue, making the US the first major post-industrial society in the world where the majority status of a dominant group will be lost due to mass immigration.[25] With alternate immigration scenarios, the whole of the United States is projected to become majority-minority sometime between 2041 and 2046 (depending on the amount of net immigration into the U.S. over the preceding years).[26][27]
  • Ethnic minority children will be the majority in the entire United States by 2019.[28]
  • Minority children are the majority among children in the following ten states: California, Nevada, New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Mississippi, and Maryland.[29]

States

From colonial times to the early-twentieth century, much of the Lower South had a Black majority. Three Southern states had populations that were majority Black: Louisiana (until about 1890[30]), South Carolina (until the 1920s[31]) and Mississippi (from the 1830s to the 1930s[32]). In the same period, Georgia,[33] Alabama,[34] and Florida[35] had populations that were nearly 50% Black, while Maryland,[36] North Carolina,[37] and Virginia[38] had Black populations approaching or exceeding 40%. Texas' Black population reached 30%.[39]

The demographics of these states changed markedly from the 1890s through the 1950s, as two waves of the Great Migration led more than 6,500,000 African-Americans to abandon the economically depressed, segregated Deep South in search of better employment opportunities and living conditions, first in Northern and Midwestern industrial cities, and later west to California. One-fifth of Florida's Black population had left the state by 1940, for instance.[40] During the last thirty years of the twentieth century into the twenty-first century, scholars have documented a reverse New Great Migration of Blacks back to southern states, but typically to destinations in the New South, which have the best jobs and developing economies.[41]

The District of Columbia, one of the magnets for Great Migration Blacks, was long the sole majority-minority federal jurisdiction in the continental U.S. The Black proportion has declined since the 1990s due to gentrification and expanding opportunities, with many Blacks moving to Texas, Georgia, Florida, and Maryland and others migrating to jobs in states of the New South in a reverse of the Great Migration.[41] In 2018, the Black population represented only 44.4% of the population[42] — a considerable decline from 75% in the late-1970s. At the same time, Asian and Hispanic populations have increased in the District, keeping it a majority-minority area.

Since 1965, foreign immigration has spurred increases in the number of majority-minority areas, most notably in California.[43] Its legal resident population was 89.5% 'non-Hispanic white' in the 1940s, but in 2018 was estimated at 36.8% 'non-Hispanic white'.[44]

Cities

Many cities in the United States became majority-minority by 2010.[45] Out of the top 15 cities by population, Jacksonville, Florida and Fort Worth, Texas are the only ones not classified as majority-minority.

Data collection

The first data for New Mexico was a 5% sample in 1940 which estimated non-Hispanic whites at 50.9%.[46] Hispanics do not constitute a race but an ethnic and cultural group: of respondents who listed Hispanic origin, some listed White race, roughly half gave responses tabulated under "Some other race" (e.g. giving a national origin such as "Mexican" or a designation such as "Mestizo" as race), and much smaller numbers listed Black, Native American, or Asian race.

In U.S. censuses since 1990, self-identification has been the primary way to identify race. Presumption of race based on countries or regions given in the ancestry question is used only when a respondent has answered the ancestry question but not the race question. The U.S. Census currently defines "White people" very broadly as "people having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa,

Caucasoids
. This definition has changed through the years.

Although the census attempts to enumerate both

undocumented immigrant population of the United States has proven hard to quantify; the census uses a 12 million base estimate nationally. However, current estimates based on national surveys, administrative data and other sources of information indicate that the current population may range as high as 20–30 million.[48]

Maps and graphs

Area White (all) Non-Hispanic White Asian American African American Hispanic or Latino American Native American Native Hawaiian Two or more races
California 57.6% 40.1% 13.0% 6.2% 37.6% 1.0% 0.4% 4.9%
Hawaii 24.7% 22.7% 38.6% 1.6% 8.9% 0.3% 10.0% 23.6%
New Mexico 68.4% 40.5% 1.4% 2.1% 46.3% 9.4% 0.1% 3.7%
Texas 70.4% 45.3% 3.8% 11.8% 37.6% 0.7% 0.1% 2.7%
District of Columbia 38.5% 34.8% 3.5% 50.7% 9.1% 0.3% 0.1% 2.9%
United States 72.4% 63.7% 4.8% 12.6% 16.3% 0.9% 0.2% 2.9%

SOURCE: U.S. Census Bureau, 2005 (for the year 2000)

Other uses

Normally, a state is considered to be majority-minority because of its ethnic/racial makeup, but other criteria is occasionally used, such as religion, disability, or age. For example, the majority of Utah residents are members of

Secularists
(non-practicing).

Criticism

In January 2016, CUNY sociologist Richard Alba wrote an article in the American Prospect arguing that the way in which majority-minority calculations are made by the Census are misleading. Anyone with any Hispanic, Asian, or Black ancestry is seen as non-white, even if they also have white ancestry. Alba argues that the incomes, marriage patterns, and identities of people of who are mixed Hispanic-white and Asian-white are closer to those of white people than monoracial Hispanics or Asians. Thus, when the Census says that non-Hispanic whites are projected to be less than 50% of the population by the 2040s, people of mixed-race ancestry are improperly excluded from that category.[49]

Non-English-speaking countries

Brazil

Whites
in 2009.

Brazil has become a majority "non-White" country as of the 2010 census,

federative units of Espírito Santo, the Federal District, Goiás, and Minas Gerais
.

Those identifying as White declined to 47.7% (about 91 million people) in the 2010 census from 52.9% (about 93 million people) in 2000 in the entire country.[50] However, in Brazil, this is not simply a matter of origin and birthrate, but identity changes as well. The Black minority did not enlarge its representation in the population to more than 1.5% in the period, while it was mostly the growth in the number of pardo people (~38% in 2000, 42.4% in 2010) that caused the demographic plurality of Brazil.

Bulgaria

The green areas have an ethnic Turkish majority or plurality, while the pink and light red areas have an ethnic Bulgarian plurality but not a majority.

Colombia

Afro-Colombians make up roughly about 10–12% of country's overall population, but make up a majority in many areas in the Colombia's Pacific region,[52] especially in Chocó Department, where they make up 80–90% of the population.[53]

East Timor

  • The vast majority (around 96%) of East Timor's population practice Catholicism, owing to Portuguese influence,
    Atauro
    , Protestants make up the majority due to Dutch influence.

Fiji

  • Fiji did not have any racial or ethnic group comprise a majority from the 1930s to the 1990s, with the exception of the 1960s and possibly early-1970s.[55]

India

The Muslim population in various parts of India in 2011.
  • districts of India
    . However, Muslims are a minority in India overall.
  • Christians currently make up the majority of the Northeast Indian states of Nagaland at 90%, Mizoram at 88% and Meghalaya at 83.3%, although Christians do not even make up more than 3% of India's total population.[56]
  • Sikhs make the majority of state of Punjab, although once again they do not form a majority in India overall.[57]
  • In the Northeast Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, no religious or ethnic group has more than 30% of the population,[57] owing to the state's great cultural diversity.

Indonesia

  • Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim country, with Islam being practiced by around 88% of the population, or over 200 million people.[58] Despite this there are several areas of Indonesia where Muslims are the minority:
  • Several neighborhoods and communities in major Indonesian cities such as
    Chinese origin, although people of Chinese descent do not form more than 10% in any of these cities overall population and only form about 1-2% of Indonesia's overall population.[60]

Israel

Map of Arab population, 2000
  • Arabs are a majority of the population in Israel's Northern District and in several other smaller parts of Israel.[61]
  • Non-
    Haredi Jews are projected to become a minority of Israel's total population by 2059.[62][63]

Italy

South Tyrol languages distribution

Mongolia

Romania

The non-purple areas have a plurality or majority of an ethnic group besides Romanians.
  • The
    Hungarian majority, while Romania as a whole has a Romanian majority.[66]

Slovakia

Sri Lanka

Thailand

Malay Muslims form the majority in several of Thailand's southern provinces.

Former Soviet Union

Abkhazia (Georgia)

Azerbaijan

  • Azeris are a minority in several parts/areas of Azerbaijan.[72]

Belarus

Estonia

Georgia

Kazakhstan

  • The
    Kazakh SSR did not have any ethnic group/nationality comprise a majority between 1933 and 1997.[77][78] Based on the 2009 census and annual estimates thereafter, some regions of Kazakhstan still did not have a Kazakh majority as of 2018.[79][80]

Kyrgyzstan

  • The
    Kirgiz SSR did not have any ethnic group/nationality comprise a majority between 1941 and 1985.[77]

Latvia

Ethnic Russians as a percentage of the population by region in 2010.

Russia

  • Based on the 2010 census, 8 of the 22 republics of Russia had a non-Russian majority, while 9 of the 22 had a Russian majority.[85]

The Soviet Union as a whole

  • There were concerns that the whole
    Soviet Union collapsed
    in 1991 occurred before the Soviet Union could have lost its ethnic Russian majority.

Transnistria (Moldova)

  • Transnistria did not have any ethnic group compromise a majority of its population in 2004.[87]

Ukraine

Ethnic composition of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1991.
The municipalities with a color other than light blue have a plurality or majority composed of an ethnic group other than Serbs.

Former Yugoslavia

Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • Bosnia and Herzegovina did not have any ethnic group comprise a majority of its population at the time of the last census in 1991 (which took place before the Bosnian War).[89] A census was conducted in Bosnia and Herzegovina in October 2013, and these results also showed that no majority population exists in the country, with the largest ethnic group being Bosniaks, who constitute 48.4% of the population (just short of a majority).

Kosovo

  • Serb majority, while Kosovo overall has an Albanian majority.[90] This division has led to controversial negotiations for land swapping southern Albanian-majority areas of Serbia for northern Serb-majority areas of Kosovo.[91][92]

Montenegro

North Macedonia

Serbia

See also

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External links