Wikipedia:Categorizing articles about people
![]() | This page documents an English Wikipedia consensus. When in doubt, discuss first on this guideline's talk page. |
![]() | This page in a nutshell: Categorizing by ethnicity, gender, religion, sexuality, or disability should be done only as appropriate. |
This guideline concerns the categorization of biographical articles about people. This includes:
- All articles named after a person or a group of persons. (This includes split-outs of such articles – see Wikipedia:Naming conventions (people) § Several articles treating the same person).
- All categories where such biographical articles could be expected to be located.
General considerations
- For articles about people, categorize by characteristics of the person the article is about, not characteristics of the article: e.g., do not add
[[Category:Biography]]
to an article. Sub-categories of Category:Biography (genre) may legitimately contain articles about biographical films or biographical books, but should not contain articles about individual people. The article is a biography; the topic of the article – the person – is not. - Keep articles about people separate. Categories with a title indicating that the contents are people, should normally only contain biographical articles and lists of people, and perhaps a non-biographical main article, though this can also be added at the top of the category. This is for clarity and ease of use, and to preserve the integrity of category tree of people articles.
Requirements
In general, categories of articles about people must be:
- Neutral – Use of WP:NPOVTITLE. Try to avoid category names that could be seen in a stigmatizing way. When in doubt, err on the side of respect.
- For example, "redirects to Prostitution). "Category:Sex workers", while possibly more neutral, would not necessarily be appropriate as a direct substitute, as it is an even broader term.
- Avoid using the word victim for anyone who is not specifically a victim of a crime. For example, "AIDS victims" is not an appropriate term for HIV-positive people.
- Using speedy deletion.
- For example, "
- Verifiable – Do not categorize people based upon deduction, inference, residence, surname, nor any partial derivation from one or more ancestors. Doing so would be main article that describes the contents. However, if the main article could never be anything more than a bulleted listof individuals who happen to meet the criteria, then a category is not appropriate. Please note that this does not mean that the main article must already exist before a category may be created, but that it must at least be reasonable to create one.
- For example, though an editor may have personal knowledgeof a notable individual's sexual orientation, the article about that individual should be added to a sexuality-based category only if the article cites a reliable source in support of that fact.
- Also, while historical persons may be identified from sources by living peopleshould have self-identified.
- For example, though an editor may have
- Defining – Biographical articles should be categorized by defining characteristics. As a rule of thumb for main biographies this includes the reason(s) for the person's reliable sources commonly and consistently refer to[1]in describing the topic, such as the nationality of a person or the geographic location of a place.
- For example, a film actor who holds a law degree should be categorized as a film actor, but not as a lawyer unless their legal career was notable in its own right or relevant to their acting career. Many people had assorted jobs before taking the one that made them notable; those other jobs should not be categorized. Similarly, celebrities commercializing a fragrance should not be in the perfumers category; not everything a celebrity does after becoming famous warrants categorization.
- For example, a film actor who holds a law degree should be categorized as a film actor, but not as a lawyer unless their legal career was notable in its own right or relevant to their acting career. Many people had assorted jobs before taking the one that made them notable; those other jobs should not be categorized. Similarly,
Sensitive categories
Be aware that mis-categorizations are more sensitive for articles on people than for articles on other topics.
This includes categories that might suggest a person has a poor reputation, and categories that belong in the categorization tree of Category:Criminals. For example, Categorizing a politician involved in a scandal as a "criminal" would create much more controversy than categorizing a behaviour or act as "criminal".
Likewise, watch for
Also, not all categories are comprehensive. For some sensitive categories, it may be better to think of the category as a set of representative and unquestioned examples, while a
Double check: Always check after saving an article whether the categorization strikes you as offensive or indelicate. To avoid that, use discernment to find those categories you think are most to the point and inoffensive. If necessary, create a new category that better serves what you want to communicate, rather than using an existing category that is (partly) inconsistent with the content of the article. But bear in mind the principle that "
Note: This advice applies only to categorization of
Categorizing by ethnicity, gender, religion, sexuality, or disability
In general,
Specific intersections
- Examples from
Do not create categories that intersect a particular topic (such as occupation, place of residence, or other such characteristics) with an ethnicity, gender, religion, sexual orientation, or disability, unless that combination is itself recognized as a
The mere fact that such individuals happen to exist is not a valid criterion for determining the legitimacy of a category. Neither would be the number of individuals who could potentially be added to a category grouping such individuals, nor whether such a grouping constitutes a positive or negative portrayal of a particular group of individuals.
And in general, even when such intersections are determined appropriate, such
At all times, the bottom line remains can a valid, encyclopedic main article be written for this grouping?
- For example, when intersecting with occupation, people should only be so categorized if this has significant bearing on their career. Likewise, in criminology, a person's actionsare more important than, for example, their race or sexual orientation.
- Ethnicity example: An "(ethnicity) politicians" category should only be created if politicians of that ethnic background constitute a distinct and identifiable group with a specific cultural and political context. There is no significant or notable difference in context between being a German American politician and a Swedish American politician. But an American politician of Native American descent may be of a different context from an American politician of European background. Thus, Category:Native American politicians may be valid, but Category:German American politicians and Category:Swedish American politicians should not exist.
- Religion example: Most sportspeople should not be categorized by religion, since being Catholic, Buddhist, or another religion is not relevant to the way they perform in sports. For instance, in sports, a Methodistathlete.
- Sexual orientation example: "LGBT writers" is a well-studied biographical category with secondary sources discussing the personal experiences of LGBT writers as a class, unique publishing houses, awards, censorship, a distinctive literary contribution (LGBT literature), and other professional concerns.
- Disability example: Category:Deaf musicians and Category:Sportspeople with limb difference and Category:Actors with dwarfism each exist, as these intersections are relevant to the topic and discussed in reliable sources, but we should not create Category:Biologists with cerebral palsy, since the intersection of Category:Biologists + Category:People with cerebral palsy is not closely relevant to the job of biologist nor is it a grouping that reliable sources discuss in depth.
Ethnicity and race
- For example, we do have Category:Jewish musicians, but we should not have Category:Semitic musicians.
When intersecting by country of residence, terminology must be appropriate to the person's cultural context.
- For example, a Canadian of indigenous heritage is categorized at Category:Canadian people of Indigenous peoples descent, not Category:Native American people.
In addition, ethnicity-related categories (such as
Also, the ethnicity of
Citizenship, nationality (which country's laws the person is subject to), national origin, and national identity (which country the person feels closest to), although sometimes correlated with ethnicity, are not the same as ethnicity and are not addressed on this page.[3]
Gender
- See also: Category:Gender – e.g. Category:Female bullfighters, Category:Male pornographic film actors, Category:Women composers
Use
A gender-specific category could be implemented where gender has a specific relation to the topic. For example, Category:Women contains articles such as International Women's Day, Women's studies, and female-specific subcategories (articles belonging in an eponymous category). Similarly, Category:Men contains articles such as father, men's studies, boy and human male sexuality, as well as male-specific subcategories. Neither category, however, should directly contain biographies of individual women or individual men.
As another example, a female heads of government category is valid as a topic of special encyclopedic interest, though it does not need to be balanced directly against a "Male heads of government" category, as historically the vast majority of political leaders have been male. Both male and female heads of government should continue to be categorized in the appropriate gender-neutral role category (e.g. Presidents, Monarchs, Prime Ministers, Governors General). Do not create separate categories for male and female occupants of the same position, such as "Male Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom" vs. "Female Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom".
As most notable organized sporting activities are segregated by gender, sportsperson categories constitute a case where "gender has a specific relation to the topic". As such, sportsperson categories should be split by gender, except in such cases where men and women participate primarily in mixed-gender competition. Example: Category:Male golfers and Category:Female golfers should both be subcategories of Category:Golfers. Category:Male actors and Category:Actresses, and Category:Male models and Category:Female models are also divided by gender.
Religion
- See also: Category:Religion – e.g. Category:Christian theologians, Category:Hindu poets, Category:Muslim writers
Categories regarding
.- For example: "Atheist" can be used as an offensive term (people living under a Fatwa are still today sometimes called "atheist" by their condemnors, irrespective of whether the former consider themselves atheist). Some of the vague (and non-NPOV) edges of inclusion in an "Atheists" category is the unclear distinction between "strong" and "weak" atheism (see the atheism article) and about whether only outspoken followers of atheistic beliefs should be named or everyone generally considered to be an "Atheist". See Category:Atheistsfor how the category is currently defined.
This may include other categories with similar issues, such as Category:Critics of religions and Category:Conspiracy theorists, and other such categories.
Sexual orientation
- See also: Category:Sexuality – e.g. Category:LGBTQ sportspeople, Category:Lesbian politicians, Category:Bisexual actors
Categories regarding sexual orientation of a living person are subject to
For a person who has died, but is
Categories that would apply to living people who do not self-identify as the orientation in question—such as "closeted gay men"—are not acceptable under any circumstances. If such a category is created, it should be immediately depopulated and deleted. Note that as similar categories of this type have actually been attempted in the past, they may be speedily deleted (as a
Disability, intersex, medical, or psychological conditions
- See also: Category:Disability – e.g. Category:Deaf musicians, Category:Sportspeople with limb difference, Category:Actors with dwarfism
People with disabilities, intersex conditions, and other medical or psychological states or conditions, should not be added to subcategories of
The final rung rule described below also applies to disability, or other medical or psychological-based intersection categories. Such categories should not be the final rung in a category tree, and should not be created if articles can't be otherwise diffused into sibling categories. For example, even if there are reliable sources that discuss Category:Deaf flight attendants, this category should not be created, since it would be a final rung category underneath Category:Flight attendants, which isn't otherwise able to be diffused.
Ghettoization: final rung
Try to avoid "
- Ethnicity example: Category:American politicians has been largely diffused into sub-categories such as Category:American politicians by state, but also has non-diffusing subcategories such as Category:African-American politicians. Membership in the non-diffusing subcategory Category:African-American politicians does not preclude membership in either diffusing subcategories such as Category:American politicians by state or other non-diffusing categories such as Category:20th-century American women politicians.
- Gender example: A woman poet from the United States should not be categorized only in Category:American women poets, but should also be categorized in Category:Poets from Massachusetts; however, because the by-state category exists, the person does not need to also be categorized directly in Category:American poets. However, if a category isn't subdivided on other non-gendered grounds such as geography, genre or time period, then the person should be left in the un-gendered parent category alongside the gendered subcategory until some other relevant sub-categorization criterion is in place.
- Disability example: Category:Blind musicians should not remove the article from Category:Musicians or any of its diffusing subcategories. All such intersection categories should be considered as "extra" categories, and people should still be placed in all other categories for which they would qualify if they didn't have this condition. A person in Category:Actors with dwarfism is first and foremost an actor, and should be categorized alongside other actors who don't have dwarfism.
Notes
- ^ in declarative statements, rather than table or list form
- Daily Dot, archived from the originalon 2013-05-02, retrieved 2013-05-02
- Categorize by defining characteristics.