2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.06.006
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Measures of “Race” and the analysis of racial inequality in Brazil

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Cited by 123 publications
(113 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
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“…These results are consistent with Bailey et al (2013), who show that alternative combinations of racial subcategories could result in Brazil having either a white or a black majority.…”
Section: Conceptualizations Of Race In Brazilsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…These results are consistent with Bailey et al (2013), who show that alternative combinations of racial subcategories could result in Brazil having either a white or a black majority.…”
Section: Conceptualizations Of Race In Brazilsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…However, until recently most of this scholarship focused on race using a singular lens. Research advocating a multidimensional approach to measuring race has produced theoretical insight in Latin America and the U.S. (Telles and Lim 1998;Saperstein 2006Saperstein , 2012Bailey, Loveman, and Muniz 2013). Using this approach and newly available data with both perceived skin color and self-identified race, we show that although all 19 countries in our study are racially stratified, they vary in the extent to which one dimension of race or another most structures a country"s social inequality.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Our results point to the need for innovative approaches that challenge long-standing assumptions about the structure of racial hierarchies. Data collection efforts that assume a single overarching racial scheme may constrain progress on racial equality by ignoring other salient dimensions of race (Bailey, Loveman, and Muniz 2013). Knowing whether a given context is best characterized by a gradational color hierarchy, categorical racial distinctions, or some combination of the two can promote further understanding of this pervasive and stubborn axis of inequality.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Por outro lado, o percentual de pessoas que se autodeclaram como pretas (7,6%) ou pardas (43,1%) corresponde a 50,7%. Além disso, há evidências demonstrando a ambiguidade das medidas de raça ou cor no Brasil quando se utilizam diferentes estratégias de coleta da informação racial (Bailey;Loveman;Muniz, 2013;Bailey;Telles, 2006;IBGE, 2011;Loveman;Bailey, 2012;Simões;Jeronymo, 2007;Lim, 1998). Muniz (2012), por exemplo, demonstra que somente metade dos entrevistados em uma pesquisa de representatividade nacional se classifica ou é classificada dentro da mesma categoria racial quando se adota quatro metodologias distintas de coleta da informação racial.…”
Section: Síntese Do Pensamento Racial Brasileiro Do Século 20 E 21unclassified
“…A influência da variabilidade taxonômica sobre a composição racial populacional e as consequências de se adotar tipologias raciais binárias sobre a desigualdade de renda foram examinadas em artigos recentes (Bailey;Loveman;Muniz, 2013;Loveman;Bailey, 2012;Muniz, 2012), mas a influência da inconsistência racial sobre medidas de desigualdade educacional e de consumo ainda não foi analisada. Ainda não há evidência sobre a hipótese de que a incerteza racial classificatória seja um argumento pertinente para a não utilização da variável como critério locativo e distributivo de benefícios mitigadores de desigualdades.…”
Section: Síntese Do Pensamento Racial Brasileiro Do Século 20 E 21unclassified