Identify the author’s focus -Compare, contrast, and critique the reading(s) -Build on your prior understanding of race based on previous reading(s) -Identify new concepts or
600 word analysis: (per reading)
-Identify the author’s focus
-Compare, contrast, and critique the reading(s)
-Build on your prior understanding of race based on previous reading(s)
-Identify new concepts or theories from the readings that are essential to the understanding of race
The multiple dimensions of race
Wendy D. Roth
Sociology Department, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Ethnic and Racial
Studies in March 2016, available online:
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01419870.2016.1140793
The citation is:
Roth, Wendy D. 2016. “The Multiple Dimensions of Race.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 39(8):
1310-1338.
ABSTRACT
Increasing numbers of people in the United States and beyond experience “race” not as a
single, consistent identity but as a number of conflicting dimensions. This article
distinguishes the multiple dimensions of the concept of race, including racial identity, self-
classification, observed race, reflected race, phenotype, and racial ancestry. With the word
“race” used as a proxy for each of these dimensions, much of our scholarship and public
discourse is actually comparing across several distinct, albeit correlated, variables. Yet
which dimension of race is used can significantly influence findings of racial inequality. I
synthesize scholarship on the multiple dimensions of race, and situate in this framework
distinctive literatures on colorism and genetic ancestry inference. I also map the
relationship between the multidimensionality of race and processes of racial fluidity and
racial boundary change.
KEYWORDS Self-classification; interviewer-classification; skin color; phenotype; ancestry;
race components
This article synthesizes a growing body of scholarship that distinguishes and analyzes the
multiple dimensions of the concept of race as experienced by individuals and as measured in
research. Increasing numbers of people in the United States and beyond experience “race” not as
a single, consistent identity but as a number of conflicting dimensions. These may include, for
instance, how an individual self-identifies her race, how she is perceived by others, how she
believes she is perceived by others, what she checks among the limited options on the census or
other surveys, her skin color and other aspects of her racial appearance, and her racial ancestry.
These dimensions influence one another, but are not necessarily the same. For example, Salvador,
a restaurant worker in New York, identifies his race as Puerto Rican. Phenotypically, he is dark-
CONTACT Wendy D. Roth, [email protected]
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skinned with indigenous features, leading some Americans to view him as Black. He believes that
Americans view him as Hispanic, based on his accent and name. Yet on the census, Salvador
checks White for his race because no listed option fits his identity and in Puerto Rico his mixed
racial ancestry allowed him to consider himself closer to White than to Black (Roth 2010). The
word “race” tends to be used as a proxy for each of these dimensions, with the result that much of
our scholarship, as well as public discourse, is actually comparing across several distinct, albeit
correlated, variables.
An important contribution of this scholarship is to emphasize that no single dimension is a
person’s “true” or “correct” race. For instance, observers’ classifications may not match the
individuals’ self-identification, yet each of these dimensions measures something different about
the way that individuals experience race in their daily lives. When it comes to housing or
employment discrimination, Salvador’s perception and treatment as Black is the meaningful
reality, regardless of the fact that those observers are not correctly guessing the way he views
himself. We can understand race as a cognitive structure that divides people into hierarchically
ordered categories on the basis of certain physical or biological characteristics that are believed to
be inherent (Roth 2012). An individual’s race is shaped by both her own identification and the
attributions and reactions of others (Cooley 1902; Jenkins 2008). By deconstructing race into its
diverse dimensions, this scholarship illustrates precisely how race is socially constructed, by
highlighting the micro-level processes and interactions that build, maintain, and occasionally shift
a cognitive structure of race.
Much of the literature that explicitly addresses the multiple dimensions of race focuses on
the United States, where demographic changes such as immigration and interracial marriage have
led to increasing numbers of people experiencing conflicting dimensions of race. This is
particularly true for groups such as Latinos and the multiracial population (Golash-Boza and Darity
2008; Harris and Sim 2000; Hitlin, Brown, and Elder 2007; Rockquemore and Brunsma 2002;
Roth 2010). Native Americans are another group where dimensions of race are frequently
inconsistent (Bratter and Gorman 2011; Campbell and Troyer 2007). Some also find
inconsistencies for Asians and Middle Easterners (Boehmer et al. 2002; Vargas and Stainback In
press), and even some White and Black Americans – two groups for whom racial classification is
assumed to be fairly static (Kressin et al. 2003; Noymer, Penner, and Saperstein 2011; Saperstein
2006). Distinct dimensions of race have also been examined in Latin America, where there has
long been awareness of discrepancies between color, ancestry, and racial classification, for
example (Bailey, Fialho, and Penner In press; Cabella and Porzecanski 2015; Telles 2014; Telles
and Lim 1998). Yet theoretically, the same processes are relevant to Europe, Asia and other regions
of the world, even if those countries focus less explicitly on the concept of race (Ahmed, Feliciano,
and Emigh 2007; Nagaraj et al. 2015; Perrin, Dal, and Poulain 2015; Song and Aspinall 2012).
Which dimension of race researchers use can significantly influence findings of racial
inequality (Bratter and Gorman 2011; Noymer et al. 2011; Saperstein and Penner 2010, 2012;
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Telles 2014). Social surveys typically measure only one dimension of race, most frequently a
circumscribed form of self-identification, leaving it to serve as a proxy for all of the others. Yet
other dimensions of race may be theoretically more appropriate for studying specific social
outcomes. At the same time, analyses of the ways that different dimensions of race influence the
same outcomes can push scholars to rethink theoretical mechanisms that are taken largely for
granted.
I begin by discussing the multiple dimensions of race and which ones may be more
theoretically appropriate for examining which social outcomes. Next, I review literature that
identifies inconsistencies between different dimensions and factors associated with those
inconsistencies. This includes both statistical studies that include different race measures and the
growing literature on multiracial people, which has advanced our theoretical understanding of how
individuals can experience different dimensions of race. I also discuss studies showing that
different dimensions of race produce different inequality estimates. Here, in addition to scholarship
that explicitly addresses multiple dimensions of race, I argue that what have been treated as
distinctive literatures focusing on specific dimensions should be understood within this broader
framework. For example, I situate the substantial literature on colorism, or phenotype inequalities
and discrimination, within a broader understanding of phenotype as one of several dimensions of
race that influences the others but also produces its own axes of stratification. I also discuss the
literature on genetic admixture inference, and while I challenge the view that current techniques
for measuring genetic ancestry capture a particular dimension of race, I argue that this scholarship
is enhanced by the inclusion of other race dimensions. Finally, I map the relationship between this
body of scholarship and related literatures of racial fluidity and racial boundary change, and
identify additional avenues that would advance this scholarship further.
Mapping the Multiple Dimensions
Figure 1 presents a typology of race dimensions reported in the literature, with some terms
used to describe them, and outcomes they may be more appropriate for studying. This typology is
not meant to be exhaustive but to provide a roadmap to the different components of race that
scholars have been studying. One challenge for this scholarship is the variety of terms used for the
same dimensions. In some cases, the same terms are used by different scholars to reference distinct
dimensions (e.g. “racial identification”), prompting the need for greater theoretical clarity. All of
these dimensions are fluid; they may vary over time and be influenced by a variety of contextual
factors. However, fluidity within one dimension needs to be distinguished conceptually from
differences across dimensions. To aid scholars conducting research in this area, the Multiple
Components of Race Data Library (Bratter, Campbell, and Roth 2014) profiles social science
surveys that include measures of multiple dimensions of race.
[Figure 1 about here]
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Racial Identity refers to a person’s subjective self-identification. Importantly, it is not
limited by a set of pre-determined options and does not represent a person’s efforts to fit
themselves into any given set of boxes. It is typically measured with an open-ended self-
identification question, and while it has more frequently been the focus of qualitative research, it
could be captured through an open-ended question in survey research. This dimension might be
most suited for studying outcomes that depend on an individual’s internal self-identification
process, such as political mobilization or voting patterns, residential decision-making, social
network formation, or attitudes.
Racial Self-classification refers to the race that is checked on an official form or survey,
such as a census or federal financial aid forms. It is typically measured with a closed-ended self-
identification question. Both racial self-classification and racial identity are forms of self-
identification, so it is a valid question whether these are actually theoretically distinct dimensions
of the lived experience of race. On one hand, closed-ended questions are merely trying to measure
racial identity and necessarily fail to capture all of its complexity due to their need to simplify
response options for data analysis. However, the experience of having to fit oneself into boxes that
do not represent how one identifies racially has become an important part of how many people
experience the complexity of race. Several studies and artistic works highlight precisely this
experience for groups such as Latinos and multiracial populations (Dowling 2014; Rockquemore
and Brunsma 2002; Rodríguez 2000; Roth 2010; Scholler 2013). Race questions on national
censuses are a particular case of racial self-classification, leading Bailey (2008) to refer to the
answer people give specifically as their “Census race.” Such questions, reflecting federal standards
for data collection, represent a particular racial schema, a set of categories and way of thinking
about race that reflects the nation’s official classification system (Roth 2012). For example, in
filling out the U.S. census, many people view themselves as providing the response that best fits
the way they believe they are supposed to fit into America’s official classifications, regardless of
whether it matches their racial identity (Dowling 2014; Rodríguez 2000; Roth 2010). Other forms
and surveys may have different variants of response options, but are similar in that individuals
who see themselves falling between the boxes provided are forced to make a less-than-ideal choice.
Racial self-classification, as a proxy for racial identity, is frequently used to study a wide
range of outcome measures, and when these two dimensions correspond (e.g. in the case of
someone whose self-concept fits neatly within a society’s official classification schema) this use
is appropriate. When it is an inadequate proxy of racial identity, racial self-classification can
provide some sense of how these groups see themselves fitting into official classifications
(Rodríguez 2000). The distinction between racial self-classification and racial identity highlights
that even in terms of self-identification, people may think about or express that identification
differently in different contexts, and the nature of the question and options provided are aspects of
that context.
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Observed Race is the race that others believe you to be. In social research, it is typically
measured by the interviewer’s classification of the individual. In a person’s lived experience, it is
assessed repeatedly and often silently in numerous, daily interactions and encounters. For
individuals whose race is unambiguous, it may be assessed instantly and subconsciously; observers
may not even be aware that they are silently cataloguing a person’s race together with other pieces
of information about them. For those whose race is more ambiguous, the process may take longer
(Freeman et al. 2010) and be more conscious. A large literature in psychology examines how
observers perceive the race of others (e.g., Pauker and Ambady 2009; Willadsen-Jensen and Ito
2006; see Roth 2015). These assessments influence how people are treated and form the basis of
racial discrimination, including non-deliberate actions that nonetheless lead to socioeconomic
inequities.
An important question for understanding how to interpret observed race is who is doing
the observing. Characteristics of the observer influence how they perceive another individual’s
race (Feliciano In press; Harris 2002). An observer’s knowledge of an individual with regard to
some of the other dimensions of race may also influence their assessments. In one study,
individuals who were previously surveyed about their ancestry but died before a follow-up study
were identified by both a proxy – next of kin or nonrelatives who knew the individual – and by
funeral directors. Only 20% of those who self-classified as Native American were classified as
such by proxies, but none of them were classified as such by funeral directors (Hahn, Truman, and
Barker 1996). Although even the proxies’ assessments had low consistency with the individuals’
self-classification, some likely had greater knowledge than the funeral directors of the individuals’
racial identity or ancestry.
Similarly, the context of the observation matters for how a person’s race is observed.
Freeman and his co-authors (2011) find, in a series of images morphing photographs of Black and
White individuals, low-status attire is associated with the person being perceived as Black and
high-status attire is associated with being perceived as White. Furthermore, the influence of the
attire grew as the race of the individual became more ambiguous, suggesting that people rely on
non-physical features more when a person’s race is not clear.
We can also think of two subtypes of the Observed Race dimension. Appearance-Based
Observed Race is based solely on readily observable characteristics. This includes not only a
person’s phenotype but also visible status markers, clothing, hairstyle, and the context of the
observation. Interaction-Based Observed Race is additionally shaped by information revealed
through interaction, including a person’s accent or language ability, name, knowledge of their
family members, or comments about their background, status, or racial identity (Roth 2010).
Observers may initially make an assessment of appearance-based observed race only to alter that
assessment after interacting with them. Many Latinos describe being perceived as White or as
Black until they open their mouths to speak, at which point their accent or use of Spanish leads an
observer to reclassify them as Latino (Roth 2012). A person’s name can also be used as a racial
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cue, with research showing that the same Asian-European multiracial faces are seen as looking
significantly more European when associated with European names than with Asian names (Hilliar
and Kemp 2008). Observers in different social roles rely on different sorts of information in their
assessment of a person’s race. Those most likely to engage in racial profiling or provide services,
such as police officers, security guards, waiters, or salespeople, tend to rely on appearance-based
observed race from their initial observations. But those with greater access to the resources
associated with social mobility, such as employers, teachers, landlords, or lending agents, typically
have greater interaction (Roth 2010). As a result, each type of observed race may be more suited
to studying specific social outcomes.
The distinction between these subtypes remains greatly understudied. Studies of the
classification of photographs or morphed images rely only on appearance, unlike most real
interactions. A significant challenge for scholarship is that many surveys, as well as some
qualitative studies, do not provide enough information to reveal whether the observed race measure
reflects interviewers’ assessments based on appearance or interactions. When and how the
dimension is measured within a study can determine which one is captured. Observed race may be
appearance-based when interviewers record a classification on their first observation of a
respondent, but is interaction-based when recorded at the end of an interview. When the latter
occurs in interviews that ask for racial self-identification, the interviewer’s interaction-based
assessment is likely to also be influenced by the individual’s response.
A person can have many observed races – as many as there are observers and contexts in
which they are observed. Although we typically capture this dimension of race once, from one
interviewer, if we capture it at all, it can also be thought of as something specific to each moment
and each act of observing.
Reflected Race refers to an individual’s belief of how others classify them. It draws on the
concept of reflected appraisals and the idea of the “looking-glass self” (Cooley 1902), which
focuses on how an individual’s racial identity is influenced by the perceptions of others. However,
within the emerging literature, scholars consider reflected race a distinctive dimension of people’s
lived experience of race, one that may or may not influence their racial identity. In this way, it is
useful for understanding the process of self-identification as well as other outcomes such as
perceived discrimination.
However, most often reflected race – measured by questions such as “What race do most
people think you are?” – is used as a proxy for observed race in self-administered or telephone
surveys where interviewers cannot observe the person. The effectiveness of this proxy has never
been studied. As noted above, one’s observed race may differ based on the observers’
characteristics. To the extent that the observed individual is aware of this, specifying the reference
group doing the classifying may result in different responses. A mixed-race person with Black and
White parents may believe that Whites usually view her as Black, but Blacks usually view her as
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mixed-race. The CDC’s Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) Measures of
Racism Module asks respondents “How do other people in this country typically classify you?”,
which may be intended to capture how the mainstream society classifies the person, but how
respondents interpret it could vary based on the extent of interactions they have with the
mainstream society. Ideally, these questions would specify the reference group, whether it is
mainstream society, the individual’s own racial group, or specific minority groups (e.g. Blacks or
Latinos).
Phenotype refers to aspects of a person’s physical appearance that are socially understood
as relevant to racial classification. This includes skin color as well as other features such as hair
texture or color, nose shape, lip shape, and eye color. This is a dimension of race that varies,
sometimes considerably, within racial categories. It affects most other dimensions of races but is
not synonymous with any of them.
Much of the research on phenotype focuses on skin color, usually measured by interviewer
classification with either a categorical question asking the interviewer to rate the person’s skin
color from light to dark or a color palette that interviewers memorize and apply to the respondent.
Although more common in the past, few studies today use a spectrophotometer, an instrument that
measures light reflectance off the skin,1 and measures of self-perceived skin color are fairly rare
(Monk 2015). Thus the bulk of scholarship on skin color reflects someone else’s perception of an
individual’s color. This may be appropriate for studies of color-based discrimination based on
other people’s perceptions. However, Monk (2015) shows that, compared to interviewer-rated skin
color, self-reported skin color is actually a better predictor of internalized measures such as
perceived discrimination, which predict key health outcomes among African-Americans. Future
typologies of race dimensions may find it useful to distinguish self-reported and observed
dimensions of phenotype, both skin color and other features, as data become available to explore
these distinctions in greater depth.
Observed skin color, much like observed race, is influenced by the person doing the
perceiving. Hill (2002) found that Black and White interviewers saw more color variation within
their own race than in the other, such that White interviewers rated Black subjects’ color as darker
than did Black interviewers, and Black interviewers rated White subjects as lighter. Contextual
cues also matter, and indeed the same kinds of social and interactional cues that distinguish
interaction-based from appearance-based observed race – name, accent, language ability – may
also influence an interviewer’s rating of a person’s skin color. An experimental study found that
the inclusion of racially-coded names influenced how observers rated an image’s skin color.
Specifically, people rated the same face as darker when it was associated with a distinctively
Hispanic name rather than a non-Hispanic name (Garcia and Abascal In press).
Phenotype is more complex than skin color alone, yet few surveys include measures of
other features, and those that do typically only ask interviewers to record the respondent’s hair
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color and eye color. Studies have found that nose, lips, and hair texture influence individuals’
classifications, although skin color is the primary characteristic used to classify a person’s race
(Feliciano In press). Few studies consider how these other phenotypic features influence
perceptions of skin color, observed race, or socioeconomic outcomes (cf Gravlee 2005). One study
found that some Latinos rated their own skin color darker than a White American observer rated
their color because they had African or Indigenous facial features; they viewed their non-European
nose, lips or hair texture as darkening their overall color, while the American observed focused
only on skin tone (Roth 2012).
Racial Ancestry is a dimension of race that influences other dimensions, such as racial
identity and observed race. This is particularly true in the United States, where racial ancestry was
used as the basis for determining who was Black for much of the nation’s history (Davis 1991), as
well as what fraction of Indigenous ancestry was needed to be considered Native American (Snipp
1989). In assessing what another person is (or making a judgment about appearance-based
observed race), observers often rely on phenotype, but do so because such physical differences are
thought to reveal an ancestral lineage (Smedley and Smedley 2012). In fact, because racial
classification depends not just on phenotype but also on ancestry in North America, many view
race as “a supra-individual, social-relational phenomenon, not as a subjective individual property”
(Brubaker 2015:22), where someone cannot take on a race from which they have no ancestry. The
widespread public rejection of the Black identity claimed by Rachel Dolezal, the NAACP chapter
president who was revealed to be of European descent, is a case in point. In other societies, racial
ancestry is less important and simply living the life of a group member is sufficient for inclusion
(Wimmer 2008).
Although we can think of racial ancestry as the compiled racial groups of one’s ancestors,
most people are unaware of all of the racial ancestry they have. Knowledge of family trees may
only go back a few generations, and in some cases, racial ancestries were buried when relatives
passed as members of different races to pursue greater opportuni
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