Public Health
Volume 122, Issue 1 , Pages 61-69, January 2008

The categorization of African descent populations in Europe and the USA: should lexicons of recommended terminology be evidence-based?

  • P.J. Aspinall

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +441892517593; fax: +441227827868.

Centre for Health Services Studies, School of Social Policy, Sociology, and Social Research, University of Kent, George Allen Wing, Canterbury, Kent CT2 7NF, UK

Received 26 June 2006; received in revised form 20 January 2007; accepted 22 February 2007.

Summary 

This review attempts to evaluate a proposed lexicon for African-descent populations from the viewpoint of saliency amongst those described and wider official and scientific usage, focusing on Britain and the USA. It is argued that it is unsatisfactory to privilege the term ‘African American’ over ‘Black’ for African-descent populations in the USA as the evidence base shows that both labels compete as self-designations on co-equal terms, while ‘Black’ is the prevalent term in scientific writing. Moreover, ‘African American’ is not an inclusive term for the African-descent population and it is not known how prevalent and enduring the term will prove to be. With respect to Britain, the census terms of ‘Black African’ and ‘Black Caribbean’ are well established, the increasing popularity of ‘Black British’ also being recognized in census labels. Given the increasing interest in the relationship between ethnic identity and health, there are arguments for documenting the diversity of terminology amongst different user constituencies in country-specific settings. The approach of synthetic glossaries of consensual terms may, through the need for economy and parsimony in the use of terminology, contribute to an unsatisfactory paring of that diversity.

Keywords: African American, Black, Race, Ethnicity, Terminology

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PII: S0033-3506(07)00083-2

doi:10.1016/j.puhe.2007.02.018

Public Health
Volume 122, Issue 1 , Pages 61-69, January 2008