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Pacific Islander Americans and Multiethnicity: A Vision of America's Future?
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1995
Year
EthnicityPacific Islander AmericansEducationIndigenous PeopleEthnic Group RelationPlural PeopleCultural StudiesIndigenous StudyRaceCultural IdentityAmerican IdentityCultural DiversityRacial GroupMultiple Ethnic StrainsEthnic StudiesLanguage StudiesIdentity IssueSingle Ethnic IdentitiesSocial IdentityMulticulturalismEthnic IdentityCultureSociologyCultural AnthropologyAnthropologySocial AnthropologyNational IdentitySocial Diversity
Americans are rapidly becoming an ethnically plural people. Not only are there many different peoples in the U.S., but a sharply increasing number of individuals are coming to have and to recognize multiple ethnic strains within themselves. The current literature on ethnicity is inadequate, for it assumes that people have only single ethnic identities when, in fact, many people, like Pacific Islander Americans, have long held multiethnic identities. Drawing on survey data and interviews as well as literary sources, this article analyzes the features of Pacific Islander American multiethnic identity: it is situational; individuals commonly simplify their ethnicity in practical living; and people with multiple ancestries are admitted to group membership on much the same basis as people with single ancestries. The bases of Pacific Islander American ethnicity include ancestry, family, practice, and place.