How the U.S. government measures race has changed substantially since censuses began in 1790. Today, Americans differ on whether the government should ask about race.
Racial categories, which have been on every U.S. census, have changed from decade to decade, reflecting the politics and science of the times.
For decades, federal officers have had to rely on more than race or ethnicity to stop and question someone over citizenship.
Unlocking the power of health equity demands acknowledging a stark truth: race and ethnicity matter in cancer control planning. The current absence of robust and carefully analyzed race and ethnicity ...
Harvard will forbid alumni interviewers from including any information about an applicant’s race, ethnicity, or national ...
Meet some of the team behind UConn Health's effort to improve health care quality, address patient disparities with more REL ...
In a textbook collaboration between two AP reporting teams, the AP scored a major scoop on the Black Lives Matter movement.
The handbook for alumni interviewers of prospective students explicitly directs them not to ask about a student’s race, ...
Functional recovery after EVT for AIS varies by race and ethnicity, even though procedural success is similar across groups.
A cross-sectional analysis finds complications and health conditions in two thirds of hospitalizations for delivery, with ...