Racial and ethnic intermarriages slowing.

PositionYOUR LIFE

Immigration has played a key role in unprecedented declines in interracial and interethnic marriage in the United States during the last decade, suggests a study by Ohio State University, Columbus. The findings imply that the burgeoning number of Hispanic and Asian immigrants to the U.S. led to more marriages within these groups, and fewer marriages between members of these groups and whites.

"These declines in intermarriages are a significant departure from past trends," notes Zhenchao Qian, professor of sociology. "The decline reflects the growth in the immigrant population during the 1990s--more native-born Asian-Americans and Hispanics are marrying their foreign-born counterparts"

Moreover, the study found that interracial marriages involving African-Americans increased significantly during the 1990s, but still continued to lag far behind other minorities. Interracial and interethnic marriages began to increase in the 1970s and continued to grow through the 1980s, Qian points out. Almost all such marriages are between whites and minorities--very few marriages occur among people of different minority groups. However, the rate of inter-marriages began declining in the 1990s--particularly those involving whites and Asian-Americans or Hispanics.

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