Boston Herald

Study sheds light on Americans’ views on race, genetics

- By DARCEL ROCKETT CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Race isn’t a black and white issue.

It seems many Americans know that, according to a recent study by Northweste­rn University’s Center for the Study of Diversity and Democracy. The survey, conducted in collaborat­ion with DNA testing company 23andMe, looked at people’s perception­s and attitudes regarding race and genetics.

It found 33.8 percent of Americans think biology totally determines ra- cial identity; 18.8 percent think it somewhat determines race; 30.2 percent believe the two are related but not causal; 17.2 percent see no relation.

“I believed the numbers

— ALVIN TILLERY JR. on difference­s among races

were going to be far worse,” said Alvin Tillery Jr., director of CSDD. “I expected two-thirds of every population group would believe that science or biology determines your race. That was a huge surprise.”

The CSDD data, gathered from 3,000 adults this year, found white people to be the most committed to the idea that biology determines race (37.2 percent), followed by Latinos (27.1 percent), Asian-Americans (26 percent) and African-Americans (24.5 percent).

“To some extent, we can’t be too surprised by that,” Tillery said of the last statistic. “Study after study in race relations research show black Americans are the most committed to democratic personal choice — it’s this unwillingn­ess to be defined by the system.”

Biological­ly, humans are 99.9 percent geneticall­y identical, according

‘We still live in a society that demarcates us by race and that tiny, tiny sliver of our genetic code that is visibly different to others.’

to the Human Genome Project, completed in April 2003.

The CSDD study found that about half of Americans think skin color is the best way to identify a person’s race; 35 percent think culture and history play a role; 18 percent believe race is a personal choice.

To be clear, CSDD defines race as a construct that human beings use to organize themselves and others into groups. This construct often, but not always, relies on phenotypic­al or gross characteri­stics, also known as outward appearance.

Tillery explores this in his NU classes. He shows students a genomic pie chart representi­ng someone who is 26 percent Scottish/Irish/U.K. and 74 percent West/Central Africa.

He asks who they think the person is in the class. Most think the person must be able to pass for white.

When it’s revealed that the genomic scan is Tillery’s, he said students are visibly shocked.

“The takeaway is we all got far more genetic complexity than we realize,” Tillery said. “Yet we still live in a society that demarcates us by race and that tiny, tiny sliver of our genetic code that is visibly different to others.”

This is the second study that CSDD has conducted since opening 18 months ago — the first, in 2017, looked at how black Americans understand and perceive the Black Lives Matter movement. Both are collaborat­ive projects that Tillery said follows the mission of the center, which is to strengthen a multiracia­l and gender-equitable democracy.

Another goal of this year’s survey was to gauge whether DNA tests make our existing perception­s of race better or worse. Tillery said the modern world is built on the misuse of these racial constructs to justify human rights violations (like genocide, slavery and colonialis­m) and the extraction and transfer of resources from certain population­s to others.

He mentioned scenarios in which white people, after discoverin­g they have a 10 percent African genome, check the “person of color” box on elite college applicatio­ns, believing it’s easier to get accepted if you’re black or Latino.

“I don’t think we have thought about what possibilit­ies there are, but we’ve certainly thought of the kind of situationa­l identity problem in sociology where people choose what identity to stress as it suits their strategic and emotional goals,” Tillery said. “People getting these scans back may shift races for a variety of reasons, so that’s something that we definitely want to understand.”

Fifty-six percent of those polled said race relations are getting worse, not better. But whether DNA testing contribute­s to that decline, has not been proved, Tillery said. That’s a concept he’d like to research next.

“When I did my ancestry test on Ancestry.com, they tell you who your closest kin who has also taken the test (is), and my closest kin is a white woman,” he said.

“Geneticall­y she and I have almost identical genomic scans . ... We’ve known that these things can happen, but there’s never been a study to try to account for how the general population thinks about these issues. That’s what we’re doing with this project.”

 ?? TNS PHOTO ?? DEEPER UNDERSTAND­ING: Alvin Tillery Jr., the director of the Center for the Study of Diversity and Democracy at Northweste­rn University, said the center’s mission is to strengthen a multiracia­l and gender-equitable democracy.
TNS PHOTO DEEPER UNDERSTAND­ING: Alvin Tillery Jr., the director of the Center for the Study of Diversity and Democracy at Northweste­rn University, said the center’s mission is to strengthen a multiracia­l and gender-equitable democracy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States