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Beyond black and white: Many proudly identify as multiracial.
Beyond black and white: Many proudly identify as multiracial.
When filling in those standardized tests or applying for a job, you check a box: Caucasian_, African-American_, Asian_, Native American_, Other__.  At one time, there weren’t many takers for the Other category. But that is changing.

     As of 2013, 9 million Americans chose two or more categories when asked about race by the U.S. Census Bureau, notes a Pew Research Center report released June 11. Like President Barack Obama, the child of an African father and white mother, more and more Americans identify as multiracial. And 60 percent of multiracial adults are proud of their mixed-race background, the center found.
     In 2000, the Census Bureau allowed people to choose more than one racial category, the report points out. The multiracial population has grown since then: The number of biracial Americans who are white and black more than doubled between 2000 and 2010. The number of white and Asian-Americans has increased by 87 percent, the report noted.  
     But the center also said that generalizations about multiracial adults don’t work. Here are five findings from the Pew report, Multiracial in America: Proud, Diverse and Growing in Numbers.

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