PAA 2009
  Home   |   Sessions by Topic   |   Program Summary   |   Participants Index

Abstract Viewer

Who Is at Risk of Racial Discrimination? Perceived Race and Health Disparities in the United States

Aliya Saperstein, University of Oregon

Recent scholarship argues that the experience of discrimination is an important cause of racial disparities in health. Yet standard methods of measuring race in surveys rely on the respondents’ racial identification – how they choose to describe themselves – rather than a measure (presumably) more directly connected to discrimination: how they are perceived racially by others. This study draws on data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and explores whether adding perceived race to an analysis of health disparities provides more insight than self-identification alone. The results – that perceived race matters but not necessarily in the ways we might expect – raise important questions about how racial discrimination operates and what we are measuring (or want to measure) when we measure “race.”

See paper.


This website is hosted and powered by software developed by the Office of Population Research (OPR) at Princeton University. For questions concerning these pages or the meeting program please contact paa2009@popassoc.org. For all other matters please contact membersvc@popassoc.org at Population Association of America (PAA).