1. Friendship choices of multiracial adolescents: Racial homophily, blending, or amalgamation?
- Author
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Jamie Mihoko Doyle and Grace Kao
- Subjects
Racial composition ,White (horse) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Native american ,media_common.quotation_subject ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Racial group ,Article ,humanities ,Homophily ,Education ,Friendship ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health), we utilize the concepts of homophily, blending, and amalgamation to describe the possible friendship patterns of multiracials. Homophily occurs when multiracials are most likely to choose other multiracials as friends. Blending occurs when friendship patterns of multiracials are somewhere in-between those of their monoracial counterparts. Amalgamation consists of friendship patterns that are similar to one of their monoracial counterparts. All groups exhibit signs of amalgamation such that non-white multiracials resemble Blacks, and White multiracials resemble whites except for Black-White multiracials. Black-Whites, Asian-Whites, and Asian-Blacks also exhibit signs of blending, while only Native American multiracials show signs of homophily. Multiracials have different experiences depending on their specific racial composition, and while they seem to bridge the distance between racial groups, their friendship patterns also fall along Black and White lines.
- Published
- 2007
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