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Palgrave Macmillan
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How Everyday Forms of Racial Categorization Survived Imperialist Censuses in Puerto Rico

  • Book
  • © 2021

Overview

  • Challenges the assumption that states are all-powerful in terms of classifying and enumerating their population
  • Examines the role of lay understandings of the social world in crafting meaningful census categories
  • Contributes to sociology, Latin American Studies, studies of race and ethnicity, and beyond

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book examines the history of racial classifications in Puerto Rico censuses, starting with the Spanish censuses and continuing through the US ones. Because Puerto Rican censuses were collected regularly over hundreds of years, they are fascinating “test cases” to see what census categories might have been available and effective in shaping everyday ones. Published twentieth-century censuses have been well studied, but this book also examines unpublished documents in previous centuries to understand the historical precursors of contemporary ones. State-centered theories hypothesize that censuses, especially colonial ones, have powerful transformative effects. In contrast, this book shows that such transformations are affected by the power and interests of social actors, not the strength of the state. Thus, despite hundreds of years of exposure to the official dichotomous and trichotomous census categories, these categories never replaced the continuous everyday ones because thecensus categories rarely coincided with Puerto Rican’s interests.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, USA

    Rebecca Jean Emigh

  • Department of Sociology, South Dakota State University, Brookings, USA

    Patricia Ahmed

  • Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, USA

    Dylan Riley

About the authors

Rebecca Jean Emigh is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA. She studies long-term processes of social change, particularly how cultural, economic, and demographic factors intersect to create those processes. With Dylan Riley and Patricia Ahmed, she is the author of Antecedents of Censuses from Medieval to Nation States: How Societies and States Count and Changes in Censuses from Imperialist to Welfare States: How Societies and States Count. 

Patricia Ahmed is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at South Dakota State University, USA. Her research interests include comparative/historical sociology, cross-cultural sociology, and globalization.

Dylan Riley is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Berkeley, USA. He studies capitalism, socialism, democracy, authoritarianism, and knowledge regimes in a broad comparative and historical perspective.



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