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The declining significance of race among American men during The latter half of the twentieth century
Authors:Arthur Sakamoto  Huei-Hsia Wu  Jessie M. Tzeng
Affiliation:Department of Sociology, University of Texas, Austin 78712, USA. sakamoto@mail.la.utexas.edu
Abstract:The extent to which racial minority groups face discrimination in the labor market is the subject of considerable debate. Using William J. Wilson's thesis of the declining significance of race as our theoretical context, we provide further empirical evidence about labor market discrimination by investigating wages among African American, American Indian, Chinese American, Hispanic white, Japanese American, and non-Hispanic white men. We find, during the period before the civil rights movement, that a substantively significant wage disadvantage is evident for these minority groups with controls for observed labor force characteristics. In recent data, these net disadvantages are reduced substantially for each of these groups except Hispanics. With the exception of Hispanics, the results support Wilson's thesis.
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