Almost All Millennials Accept Interracial Dating and Marriage
Over
the last several decades, the American public has grown increasingly
accepting of interracial dating and marriage. This shift in opinion has
been driven both by attitude change among individuals generally and by
the fact that over the period, successive generations have reached
adulthood with more racially liberal views than earlier generations.
Millennials are no exception to this trend: Large majorities of
18-to-29 year olds express support for interracial marriage within
their families, and the level of acceptance in this generation is
greater than in other generations.
The Pew Research Center's recent report on racial attitudes in the U.S.,
finds that an overwhelming majority of Millennials, regardless of race,
say they would be fine with a family member's marriage to someone of a
different racial or ethnic group. Asked about particular groups to
which they do not belong, Millennials are about equally accepting of
marriage to someone in any of the groups tested: Roughly nine-in-ten
say they would be fine with a family member's marriage to an African
American (88%), a Hispanic American (91%), an Asian American (93%) or a
white American (92%).
This high level of acceptance among Millennials holds true across
ethnic and racial groups; there is no significant difference between
white, black and Hispanic Millennials in the degree of acceptance of
interracial marriage.
Compared
with older groups, particularly Americans ages 50 or older, Millennials
are significantly more likely to be accepting of interracial marriage.
While 85% of Millennials say they would be fine with a marriage to
someone from any of the groups asked about, that number drops to about
three-quarters (73%) among 30-to-49-year-olds, 55% among
50-to-64-year-olds, and just 38% of those ages 65 and older. And unlike
among Millennials, among those ages 50 and older there are substantial
differences between blacks and whites in acceptance of interracial
marriage, with older blacks considerably more accepting of interracial
marriage than are whites of the same age.
The gap between Millennials and other age groups is evident for all
of the individual groups asked about, though the size of the gap does
vary as Americans ages 50 to 64 and 65 and older are less likely to
accept marriages to members of some groups (in particular, African
Americans) than others (in particular, white Americans).
Other demographic characteristics also are correlated with attitudes
towards interracial marriage. Both overall and within each generation,
acceptance of interracial marriage is positively associated with being
female and with higher levels of education. And among older
generations, those who can count at least some members of other races
as friends and those who live outside of the South are also more
accepting of interracial marriage.
Shift in Public Attitudes over Time
Not
surprisingly, given the high levels of acceptance of interracial
marriage among Millennials, nearly all 18-to-29-year-olds (93%) agree
with the statement "I think it is all right for blacks and whites to
date each other." Pew Research has tracked responses to this question
for more than two decades in its study of American political values,
most recently in April 2009. These surveys have found Millennials very
accepting of interracial dating since the opinions of this generation
first were tracked in 2003 (in 2003, 92% of Millennials agreed that it
was all right for blacks and whites to date).
When the first
Generation Xers began to be tracked in the late 1980s, about two-thirds
of this generation (those born between 1965 and 1980) agreed that it
was "all right for blacks and whites to date each other." By the time
all members of that generation had reached age 18, fully 85% agreed
with the statement -- about the same proportion as does so today (86%).
The opinions of Baby Boomers (those born between 1946 and 1964) became
more accepting of black-white dating in the early 1990s and have
steadily become more so; in recent years, Boomers have become almost as
accepting of interracial dating as Gen Xers. The oldest generation
currently being tracked, the "Silent" generation (those born between
1928 and 1946), has steadily become more racially liberal over time,
though they remain significantly less likely to approve of interracial
dating than are those in younger generations (68% in 2009).
Younger Generations More Likely to Have Friends of a Different Race
In
addition to their racially liberal views on marriage and dating, a
majority of Millennials (54%) in Pew Research's report on race say at
least some of their friends are of a different race. The percentage of
white Millennials saying they have black friends (56%) is about the
same as the percentage of black Millennials who say they have white
friends (55%). There is little difference on this question between
Millennials and Americans ages 30 to 49. But Americans ages 50 and
older are considerably less likely to have cross-racial friendships,
and this difference is largely the result of fewer older whites having
black friends. Just 36% of whites ages 50 to 64 and 32% of whites ages
65 and older report having at least some black friends. There are no
statistically significant differences between older and younger blacks
in reports of cross-racial friendships.