Sociological Science (Nov 2024)

Some Birds Have Mixed Feathers: Bringing the Multiracial Population into the Study of Race Homophily

  • David R. Schaefer,
  • Sara I. Villalta,
  • Victoria Vezaldenos,
  • Adriana J. Umaña-Taylor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15195/v11.a38
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 38
pp. 1046 – 1083

Abstract

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Research on race homophily in the United States has yet to meaningfully include the growing multiracial population. The present study confronts this challenge by drawing upon recent conceptualizations of race as a multidimensional construct. In aligning this insight with current understandings of homophily, we identify and address several open questions about the origins of race homophily—namely regarding the possibility of peer influence on racial identity and network selection based on multiple facets of race. Data are from 3,036 youth in two large U.S. high schools with sizable proportions of mixed-race students. Using a stochastic actor-oriented model, we find that students choose friends based on similarity across multiple dimensions of racial identity and that peer influence operates to reinforce multiracial youths' racial self-classification rather than to induce change. This points to a system where race homophily arises through multiple selection mechanisms and is reinforced by pressure toward conformity.

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