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White Latin Americans : ウィキペディア英語版
White Latin American

White Latin Americans are the people of Latin America who are considered white, typically due to European, or in some cases, Levantine descent.
Latin American countries have often had miscegenation, since even small amounts of European ancestry could entail significant upwards social mobility.
Throughout Latin America people with heritage from European settlers arriving in the Americas throughout the colonial and post-independence periods. Many of the earliest settlers were Spanish and Portuguese, and after independence, Italians have led numerically among the millions of immigrants. Notably large immigration occurred as well by Germans, Poles, Irish, British, French, Russians, Belgians, Dutch, Scandinavians, Ukrainians, Hungarians, Croats, Swiss, Greeks and other Europeans.〔
Composing about 33% or 36% of the population according to some sources,〔CIA data from The World Factbook's (Field Listing :: Ethnic groups ) and (Field Listing :: Population ), retrieved on May 09 2011. They show 191,543,213 whites from a total population of 579,092,570. For a few countries the percentage of white population is not provided as a standalone figure, and thus that datum is considered to be not available; for example, in Chile's case the CIA states "white and white-Amerindian 95.4%". Unequivocal data are given for the following: Argentina 41,769,726
* 97% white = 40,516,634; Bolivia 10,118,683
* 15% white = 1,517,802; Brazil 203,429,773
* 53.7% white = 109,241,788; Colombia 44,725,543
* 20% white = 8,945,109; Cuba 11,087,330
* 65.1% white = 7,217,852; Dominican Republic 9,956,648
* 16% white = 1,593,064; El Salvador 6,071,774
* 9% white = 546,460; Honduras 8,143,564
* 1% white = 81,436; Mexico 113,724,226
* 9% white = 10,235,180; Nicaragua 5,666,301
* 17% white = 963,272; Panama 3,460,462
* 10% white = 346,046; Peru 29,248,943
* 15% white = 4,387,342; Puerto Rico 3,989,133
* 76.2% white = 3,039,719; Uruguay 3,308,535
* 88% white = 2,911,511. Total white population in these countries: 191,543,213, i.e 33.07% of the region's population.〕〔〔http://redalyc.uaemex.mx/pdf/128/12891701.pdf〕 White Latin Americans constitute the largest racial-ethnic group in the region. ''White'' is the self-identification of many Latin Americans in some national censuses, as seen further on in this article. According to a survey conducted by consultant Cohesión Social in Latin America, conducted on a sample of 10,000 people from seven different countries of the region, 34% of those interviewed identified themselves as White.
==Being White==
(詳細はracial classification, a system that developed as Europeans colonized large parts of the world and employed classificatory systems to distinguish themselves from the local inhabitants of those countries. However, while most racial classifications include a concept of being White that is ideologically connected to European heritage and specific phenotypic, biological features associated with European heritage, there is a wide variability about the ways in which they are used to classify people. These differences have to do with the particular historical processes and social contexts in which a given racial classification is used. Since Latin America is characterized by widely differing histories and social contexts, there is also wide variability in the use of the classification white throughout Latin America.
According to Peter Wade specialist in race concepts of Latin America
...racial categories and racial ideologies are not simply those that elaborate social constructions on the basis of phenotypical variation or ideas about innate difference but those that do so using the particular aspects of phenotypical variation that were worked into vital signifiers of difference during European colonial encounters with others.〔Wade, Peter. 1997. Race and Ethnicity in Latin America. Critical Studies On Latin America. Pluto Press p. 15〕
In many parts of Latin America being white is connected more to socio-economic status than to specific phenotypic traits - and it is often said that in Latin America "Money Whitens"〔Levine-Rasky, Cynthia. 2002. "Working through whiteness: international perspectives. SUNY Press (p. 73) ""Money whitens" If any phrase encapsulates the association of whiteness and the modern in Latin America, this is it. It is a cliché formulated and reformulated throughout the region, a truism dependant upon the social experience that wealth is associated with whiteness, and that in obtaining the former one may become aligned with the latter (and vice versa)"."〕 Also within Latin America there is variation in how racial boundaries have been defined. In Argentina, for example, the notion of mixture has been downplayed resulting in the country having no real Mestizo group, whereas in countries like Mexico and Brazil the notion of mixedness has been fundamental for nation-building, resulting in a large group of Mestizos in Mexico or Pardos in Brazil (unlike the Mestizos of Mexico, most non-White Brazilians self-identify as Pardo, not Mestiço;〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=IBGE - sala de imprensa - notícias )〕 the ancestral background of most Pardo Brazilians is a mix of mostly African, Native American and European ancestries)〔(Do pensamento racial ao pensamento racional ), (laboratoriogene.com.br ).〕 being considered neither fully white nor fully non-white.
Unlike the U.S where ancestry is used to define race, Latin American scholars came to agree by the 1970s that race in Latin America could not be understood as the "genetic composition of individuals" but instead "based upon a combination of cultural, social, and somatic considerations. In Latin America, a person's ancestry is quite irrelevant to racial classification. For example, full-blooded siblings can often be classified different races (Harris 1964).〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Sample Chapter for Telles, E.E.: Race in Another America: The Significance of Skin Color in Brazil. )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Japanese in multiracial Peru, 1899-1942 )
For these reasons the distinction between "white" and "mixed", and between "mixed" and "black" or "indigenous" is largely subjective and situational meaning that any attempt to quantify racial categories into discrete categories is fraught with problems.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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