1. DIFFERENTIAL FERTILITY IN CALIFORNIA IN 1930: THE RACIAL ASPECT.
- Author
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Thomas, Dorothy Swaine
- Subjects
ETHNIC relations ,RACIAL differences ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,RACE relations ,AGE distribution - Abstract
This article focuses on the racial aspect of the differential fertility in California in 1930. In California, problems connected with the racial differential are particularly significant. The racial minorities are numerically important. They form rather distinct cultural groups and are, in the main, clearly set off from the majority by skin color. Many of them are denied the privilege of citizenship, and miscegenation is either prohibited by law or enforced by custom. And they are markedly differentiated from the white majority in another respect: they are not only guaranteeing the stability of their numbers in the future but were, in 1930, reproducing at a rate so high that they might be expected, when their age distribution becomes stabilized, to double in numbers in little more than a generation, while the reproductive level of the whites was, under the same conditions, at so low a level that a decline in numbers by about a third per generation might have been expected. The aim of this paper is to uncover some of the factors underlying this differential.
- Published
- 1941
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