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Social Identity in New Mexicans of Spanish-Speaking Descent Highlights Limitations of Using Standardized Ethnic Terminology in Research

机译:讲西班牙语血统的新墨西哥人的社会形式突出了在研究中使用标准化民族术语的局限性

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In this study, we evaluated the extent to which regional history has shaped the social identity nomenclature in New Mexicans of Spanish-speaking descent (NMSD). We asked 507 NMSD to list the social-identity terms they used to describe themselves and their parents, and we examined the correspondence between these choices and family ties to the region, birthplace, and continental ancestry. NMSD frequently identified using the regional terms "Nuevomexicano/a" (15%) and "Spanish" (12%). These individuals reported family ties to the region that predate New Mexican statehood. They and their parents were frequently born in New Mexico, frequently chose the other of the two terms as a secondary descriptor, and frequently ascribed one of the two terms to their parents. About 10% of NMSD identified as "Mexican American" and "Mexican." About 25% of these individuals, and more than half of their parents, were born in Mexico. They also frequently chose the other of the two terms as a secondary descriptor and frequently ascribed one of the two terms to their parents. Compared to NMSD who identified as "Mexican" and "Mexican American," individuals who identified as "Nuevomexicano/a" and "Spanish" had higher European ancestry and lower Native American and African ancestry. Our results also suggest that the term "Hispanic," frequently chosen as both a primary and secondary social identity term by NMSD, may, as it continues to rise in prominence, mask more deeply rooted and potential socially relevant aspects of social identity in New Mexico. More broadly, these results indicate that regional history influences social identity nomenclatures in ways that are potentially incompatible with US Office of Management and Budget standards. This incompatibility may adversely affect the ability of researchers in the social sciences to assess the causes of social inequality and health disparities in individuals of Spanish-speaking descent in different regions of the United States. We argue that future studies would benefit from more fine-grained, region-specific analyses of social identity.
机译:在这项研究中,我们评估了区域历史在讲西班牙语血统(NMSD)的新墨西哥人中塑造了社会身份名称的程度。我们要求507 NMSD列出他们用于描述自己及其父母的社交身份术语,我们在该地区,出生地和大陆祖先之间审查了这些选择与家族之间的通信。 NMSD经常使用区域术语“Nuevomexicano / A”(15%)和“西班牙语”(12%)确定。这些个人报告了家庭关系到预测新墨西哥州的地区。他们和他们的父母经常出生在新墨西哥州,经常将两种术语中的另一项作为辅助描述符,并且经常归因于他们父母的两种术语之一。大约10%的NMSD被确定为“墨西哥美国”和“墨西哥”。大约25%的人占他们的父母的一半以上,出生于墨西哥。它们还经常将这两种术语中的另一种作为辅助描述符选择,并且经常归因于父母的两个术语之一。与鉴定为“墨西哥”和“墨西哥美国”的NMSD相比,他们被确定为“Nuevomexoo / A”和“西班牙语”的个人,具有更高的欧洲祖先和较低的美国和非洲祖先。我们的结果还表明,术语“西班牙裔”,经常被NMSD作为中小社会认同术语,因为它继续突出,面具更深深的植根品和潜在的社会认同在新墨西哥的社会认同方面。更广泛地,这些结果表明,区域历史以与美国管理和预算标准办公室可能不相容的方式影响社会认同命名。这种不相容性可能对社会科学中的研究人员提供对评估美国不同地区的讲西班牙语的血统的社会不平等和健康差异的原因的不利影响。我们认为未来的研究将受益于更细粒度,地区的社会形式分析。

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