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Hispanic andLatino areethnonyms used to refer collectively to the inhabitants of theUnited States who are ofSpanish orLatin American ancestry[1] (seeHispanic and Latino Americans). While many use the terms interchangeably, for example, theUnited States Census Bureau,[2] others maintain a distinction:Hispanic refers to people from Spanish-speaking countries (including Spain but excluding Brazil), whileLatino refers people fromLatin American countries (including Brazil but excluding Spain and Portugal).[3][4][5] Spain is included in theHispanic category, and Brazil is included in the Latino category; Portugal is excluded from both categories. Every Latin American country is included in both categories, excluding Brazil.
Hispanic was first used and defined by the U.S.Federal Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) Directive No. 15 in 1977, which defined Hispanic as "a person ofMexican,Puerto Rican,Cuban,Central America orSouth America or otherSpanish culture or origin, regardless ofrace." The term was formed out of a collaboration withMexican-American political elites to encouragecultural assimilation into American society among all Hispanic/Latino peoples and move away from the anti-assimilationist politics ofChicano identity, which had gained prominence in the preceding decades through theChicano Movement. The rise of Hispanic identity paralleled an emerging era ofconservatism in the United States during the 1980s.[5][6]
Latino first emerged at the local level through media outlets in the early 1990s. TheLos Angeles Times was one of the first major newspapers to use the termLatino instead ofHispanic. Some localpanethnic institutions and Spanish-language media adopted the term for community unity and political organizing. The emergence ofLatino resulted in increasing criticism overHispanic. Many supporters ofLatino argued thatHispanic was reasserting a colonial dynamic or relationship with Spain. Others argued thatHispanic failed to acknowledgemestizo culture and political struggle as well as erased the existence ofIndigenous,Afro-Latin American, andAsian Latinos peoples throughout the Americas.[5]Latino was also described as more inclusive.[4]Latino was included along withHispanic on the2000 U.S. census.[5]
There remains no definitive consensus over which term should be used, which has led to the rise ofHispanic/Latino andHispanic and Latino as categorical terms often used by government institutions and prominent organizations.[5] The choice between the terms is frequently associated with location: persons in theEastern United States tend to preferHispanic, whereas those in theWest tend to preferLatino.[7] According to a 2011 study by thePew Research Center, the majority (51%) ofHispanic and Latino Americans prefer to identify with their families' country of origin ornationality, while only 24% prefer the termsHispanic orLatino.[8] BothHispanic andLatino are generally used to denote people living in the United States. Outside of the United States, people living in Latin American countries usually refer to themselves by the names of their respective countries of origin.[9][10][11]
Hispanus was the Latin name given to a person from Hispania duringRoman rule. The ancient RomanHispania, which roughly comprised what is currently called theIberian Peninsula, included the contemporary states ofSpain,Portugal, andAndorra, and theBritish Overseas Territory ofGibraltar but excluding the Spanish and Portuguese overseas territories ofCanary Islands,Ceuta,Melilla,Açores andMadeira.[12][13][14]
The termHispanic was adopted by the United States government in the early 1970s during the administration ofRichard Nixon[15] after the Hispanic members of an interdepartmental Ad Hoc Committee to develop racial and ethnic definitions recommended that a universal term encompassing all Hispanic subgroups—including Central and South Americans—be adopted.[16] As the1970 census did not include a question on Hispanic origin on all census forms—instead relying on a sample of the population via an extended form ("Is this person's origin or descent: Mexican; Puerto Rican; Cuban; Central or South American; Other Spanish; or None of these"),[17] the members of the committee wanted a common designation to better track the social and economic progress of the group vis-à-vis the general population.[16]
Legal scholarLaura E. Gómez notes that key members of the Mexican-American political elite with assimilationist ideologies, all of whom were middle-aged men, helped popularize the termHispanic among the Mexican-American community, which in turn fueled both electronic and print media to use the term when referring to Mexican Americans in the 1980s. Gómez conducted a series of interviews with Mexican-American political elites on their role in promotingHispanic and found that one of the main reasons was because it stood in contrast toChicano identity: "The Chicano label reflected the more radical political agenda of Mexican-Americans in the 1960s and 1970s, and the politicians who call themselves Hispanic today are the harbringers of a more conservative, more accomadationist politics." Some of these elites sought to encourage cultural assimilation throughHispanic within their community and not be seen as "militant" in order to appeal towhite American sensibilities, particularly in regard to separating themselves fromblack political consciousness.[6] Gómez records:
Another respondent agreed with this position, contrasting his white colleagues' perceptions of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus with their perception of the Congressional Black Caucus. 'We certainly haven't been militant like the Black Caucus. We're seen as a power bloc—an ethnic power bloc striving to deal with mainstream issues.'[6]
The designation has since been used in local and federal employment,mass media, academia, and business market research. It has been used in theU.S. Census since 1980.[18] Because of the popularity ofLatino in the western portion of the United States, the government adopted this term as well in 1997, and used it in the 2000 census.[7][19]
Previously,Hispanic and Latino Americans were categorized as "Spanish-Americans", "Spanish-speaking Americans", or "Spanish-surnamed Americans". However:
The termHispanic has been the source of several debates in the United States. Within the United States, the term originally referred typically to theHispanos of New Mexico until the U.S. government used it in the1970 Census to refer to "a person of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race."[23][7] The OMB did not accept the recommendation to retain the single termHispanic. Instead, the OMB has decided that the term should be "Hispanic or Latino" because regional usage of the terms differs.Hispanic is commonly used in the eastern portion of the United States, whereasLatino is commonly used in the western portion. Since the2000 Census, the identifier has changed from "Hispanic" to "Spanish/Hispanic/Latino".[24]
Other federal and local government agencies and non-profit organizations include Brazilians and Portuguese in their definition ofHispanic. TheUS Department of Transportation definesHispanic as "persons of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Dominican, Central or South American, or others [of] Spanish or Portuguese culture or origin, regardless of race."[25] This definition has been adopted by theSmall Business Administration as well as by many federal, state, and municipal agencies for the purposes of awarding government contracts to minority-owned businesses.
TheCongressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC)—which was organized in 1976 by five Hispanic Congressmen: Herman Badillo (NY), Baltasar Corrada del Río (PR), Kika de la Garza (TX), Henry B. Gonzalez (TX) and Edward Roybal (CA)—and theCongressional Hispanic Conference include representatives of Spanish and Portuguese descent. TheHispanic Society of America is dedicated to the study of the arts and cultures ofSpain,Portugal, andLatin America. TheHispanic Association of Colleges and Universities, which proclaims itself the champion of Hispanic success in higher education, has member institutions in the U.S. mainland, Puerto Rico, Latin America, Spain, and Portugal.
In a 2012 study, most Spanish speakers of Spanish or Latin American descent in the United States did not choose to use the termsHispanic orLatino when describing their identity. Instead, they preferred to be identified by their country of origin. Over half of those surveyed said they had no preference for either term. When forced to choose, 33% choseHispanic and 14% chose "Latino."[26]
A study done in 2009 shows that there is not a significant difference between the attitudes or preferences towards the terms among young (18–25) and older individuals. The statistical numbers are almost identical. Among the overall Hispanic population, young Hispanics prefer to identify themselves with their family's country of origin. Both groups prefer the term "American" versus "Latino/Hispanic". Yet, older Hispanics are more likely to identify as white than younger Hispanics.[27] When it comes to the preference ofLatino orHispanic, the younger subgroup is more likely to state that it does not matter. If they do have a preference, both groups prefer the termHispanic rather thanLatino.[28]
The termsLatino andLatina are loan words fromItaly and originated inAncient Rome. The termLatin America was coined in France in the mid-19th century asAmérique latine, during the time of theSecond French intervention in Mexico. Scholar Juan Francisco Martinez writes that "France began talking about Latin America during the rule of Napoleon III as a way of distinguishing between those areas of the Americas originally colonized by Europeans of Latin descent and those colonized by peoples from northern Europe. But the term was used to justify French intervention in the young republics of Latin America."[29]
The adoption of the termLatino by theU.S. Census Bureau in 2000[30] and its subsequent media attention brought about several controversies and disagreements, specifically in the United States and, to a lesser extent, inMexico and otherSpanish-speaking countries. Regarding it as an arbitrary, generic term, manyLatin American scholars, journalists and organizations have objected to themass media use of the wordLatino, pointing out that such ethnonyms are optional and should be used only to describe people involved in the practices, ideologies andidentity politics of their supporters.[31][32][33][34] They argue that ifHispanic is an imposed official term, then so isLatino,[35] since it was theFrench who coined the expression "Latin America" (Amérique latine) to refer to the Spanish, French, and Portuguese-speaking countries of theWestern Hemisphere, during their support of theSecond Mexican Empire.[36][better source needed]
Some authorities ofAmerican English maintain a distinction between the termsHispanic andLatino:
Though often used interchangeably in American English, Hispanic and Latino have slightly different ranges of meaning. Hispanic, from the Latin word for "Spain," has the broader reference, potentially encompassing all Spanish-speaking peoples in both hemispheres and emphasizing the common denominator of language among communities that might sometimes seem to have little else in common. Latino—which in Spanish means "Latin" but in English is probably a shortening of the Spanish wordlatinoamericano—refers more exclusively to persons or communities of Latin American Spanish-speaking origin. Of the two, only Hispanic can be used in referring to Spain and its history and culture. In practice, however, this distinction is of little significance when referring to Spanish-speaking residents of the United States, most of whom are of Latin American origin and can thus theoretically be called by either word. Since the 1980s Latino has come to be much more prevalent than Hispanic in national media, but actual Americans of Spanish-speaking Latin American heritage are far from unified in their preferences. For some, Latino is a term of ethnic pride, evoking the broad mix of Latin American peoples, while Hispanic, tied etymologically to Spain rather than the Americas, has distasteful associations with conquest and colonization. But in recent polls of Americans of Spanish-speaking Latin American ancestry, Hispanic is still preferred over Latino among those expressing a preference, while those having no preference constitute a majority overall.[37]
TheAP Stylebook also distinguishes between the terms. TheStylebook limits "Hispanic" to persons "from—or whose ancestors were from—a Spanish-speaking land or culture. Latino and Latina are sometimes preferred". It provides a more expansive definition, however, ofLatino. TheStylebook definition ofLatino includes not only persons of Spanish-speaking land or ancestry, but also more generally includes persons "from—or whose ancestors were from— ... Latin America." TheStylebook specifically lists Brazilians as an example of a group that can be considered Latino.[citation needed]
Latino is traditionally reserved for males or a combination of males and females, andLatina for females. A group of Latina women is termedLatinas, whereas a group of Latino men or a combination of Latino and Latina individuals are designated as "Latinos" (seeLatino (demonym)).[citation needed]
BothLatino/a andLatin@ aim to challenge the gender binary that is inherent in Portuguese and Spanish,[38] which combines the Portuguese/Spanish masculine ending⟨o⟩ and the feminine⟨a⟩.
Latin@ has been noted to have the symbolical importance of suggesting inclusiveness, by having the⟨o⟩ encircle the⟨a⟩, in one character.[38] Latin@ may be used to promote gender neutrality or be used to encompass both Latinos and Latinas without using the masculine "Latinos" designation for the mixed genders group.[39][40]
The termLatinx was introduced in the early 2000s as a gender-neutral term for Latino/Latina,[38] in addition to encompassing those who identify outside of thegender binary, such as those who aretransgender, or those who aregender-fluid.[41] The term has been embraced by the LatinLGBTQ+ communities.[38][better source needed]
The termLatinx reportedly surfaced with LGBTQ+ spaces on the internet in 2004,[42] but use of the term did not take off until a decade later.[42]
The term has drawn criticisms for its invented roots, in addition to its perceivedcorruption of theSpanish language.[43]
The U.S. government has defined "Hispanic or Latino" persons as being "persons who trace their origin [to] ... Central and South America, and other Spanish cultures".[7] The Census Bureau's 2010 census provides a definition of the termsLatino andHispanic: "Hispanic or Latino" refers to a person of Mexican, South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin regardless of race. It allows respondents to self-define whether they were Latino or Hispanic and then identify their specific country or place of origin. On its website, the Census Bureau defines "Hispanic or Latino" persons as being "persons who trace their origin [to] ... Spanish-speaking Central and South America countries, and other Spanish cultures".[7][19][44]
These definitions thus arguably do not includeBrazilian Americans orBelizean Americans,[7][19][45] especially since the Census Bureau classifies Brazilian Americans and Belizean Americans as separate ancestry groups from "Hispanic or Latino".[46][47] A surge of Portuguese Americans faced a big scare[clarification needed] when the Census Bureau revealed plans to categorize people of Portuguese descent as "Hispanics" in the 2020 census. The unified feelings of dispute were displayed in a national survey conducted by Palcus within the Portuguese-American community. The results were an overwhelming 90% of participants objecting to Portuguese Americans being classified under the Hispanic ethnicity.[citation needed]
Fortunately for those opposed to the Portuguese-as-Hispanic classification[editorializing], the Census Bureau later released an update stating that they never intended to classify people of Portuguese descent as Hispanic in the 2020 census.[48][49] The 28 Hispanic or Latino American groups in the Census Bureau's reports are the following:[19][50][51] "Mexican; Central American: Costa Rican, Guatemalan, Honduran, Nicaraguan, Panamanian, Salvadoran, Other Central American; South American: Bolivian, Chilean, Colombian, Ecuadorian, Paraguayan, Peruvian, Venezuelan, Other South American; Other Hispanic or Latino: Spanish, Spanish American, All other Hispanic".
In the U.S., the terms are officially voluntary, self-designated classifications.[52][53][54][55][56] However, themass media has helped propagate them irrespective of this fact. The rapid spread ofLatino in the U.S. has been possible due to the policies of certain newspapers such as theLos Angeles Times and otherCalifornia-based media during the 1990s. Raoul Lowery Contreras writes:
For years I have campaigned against theLos Angeles Times-imposed word, 'Latino', in describing the country's fastest growing ethnic 'Group,' those with Spanish-surnames, those who speak Spanish, et al. TheLA Times set its feet in concrete and the use of the word 'Latino' and nothing has cracked the concrete since. Worst of all, other newspapers have followed theTimes' lead and news coverage, accuracy and the community have suffered.[57]: 76
Lowery Contreras argues that, according to the statistics of the Census Bureau, mostmiddle class people with Latin American background living in the U.S. reject the term.[57]: 3 He traces the polarization of the word toLos Angeles Times columnistFrank del Olmo, who regarded the termHispanic as "ugly and imprecise".[57]: 76–77 He writes:
The third reason Del Olmo objected to the word 'Hispanic' and championed the word 'Latino' was that 'Chicano' had been roundly rejected by all Mexican Americans but the most radical,blue collar, less educated, under-class people of Mexican-origin. Del Olmo pushed 'Latino' as a substitute for the rejected 'Chicano.' Unfortunately, he was in a position to push this substitution into the language of the 'Newspaper of Record' in the West. Other papers and broadcast stations took up the word because it was the 'style' of theLA Times. Frank Del Olmo single-handedly branded millions of people.[57]: 77
The naming dispute is a phenomenon that has its roots mainly inCalifornia and other neighboring states.[57][better source needed] Before the adoption of the ethnonym "Hispanic or Latino" by theU.S. government, the termHispanic was commonly used for statistical purposes. However, many people did not feel satisfied with the term and startedcampaigns promoting the use ofLatino as a new ethnonym. TheOffice of Management and Budget has stated that the new term should be, indeed, "Hispanic or Latino" because the usage of the terms differs—"Hispanic is commonly used in the eastern portion of the United States, whereas Latino is commonly used in the western portion".[58]
Despite this, debates regarding the proper name of the perceived homogeneous population of U.S. citizens with Latin American or Spanish background still abound, and are even more acute. To find out how much people agree or disagree with either term, many polls have been conducted.[59][60] According to a December 2000 poll by Hispanic Trends, 65% of the registered voters preferred the wordHispanic, while 30% chose to identify themselves asLatino. Daniel David Arreola, in his bookHispanic spaces, Latino places: community and cultural diversity in contemporary America, points out that many Latin Americans feel more comfortable identifying themselves with their country of origin:
What most of us know and what the results from the 1992 Latino National Political survey demonstrate is a preference for place of origin or national identity in what we call ourselves. Face-to-face interviews of 2,817 people were conducted in 1989 and 1990. Some 57 percent to 86 percent of Mexicans andPuerto Ricans—whether born in Mexico or born in the United States, whether born in the island or in the mainland—preferred to call themselves Mexican or Puerto Rican rather than panethnic names like Hispanic or Latino.[61]
A Pew Hispanic Center survey[62] conducted November 9 – December 7, 2011, and published April 4, 2012, reported:
Nearly four decades after the United States government mandated the use of the terms 'Hispanic' or 'Latino' to categorize Americans who trace their roots to Spanish-speaking countries, a new nationwide survey of Hispanic adults finds that these terms still haven't been fully embraced by Hispanics themselves. A majority (51%) say they most often identify themselves by their family's country of origin; just 24% say they prefer a pan-ethnic label.
One of the major arguments of people who object to either term is not only the perceivedstereotypical overtones they carry, but the unjust and unfair labeling of people who do not even belong to the practices and ideologies of such identities.[63] This is true of many indigenous peoples such as theWixarikas and theLacandones, who still practice their own religious rituals withoutsyncretism withCatholic elements. Journalist Juan Villegas writes:
The word 'Latino' may be loaded with negative connotations when used by non-Latinos in American culture because of its association with the sign 'Latin' which may imply a stereotyped character partially imposed byHollywood. Latino is a sign that needs to be contextualized. It may bring some groups together, but it also may contribute to depoliticize a movement and to stereotype a diversity of social groups and cultures.[64]
These characteristics that are often used, such as Hollywood, to classify a person of Latina/o culture and identity has been termed by scholars, "As a system of media signification, Latinidad is a performative and performed dynamic set of popular signs associated with Latinas/os and Latina/o identity. Common signifiers of Latinidad are language, linguistic accents, religious symbols, tropical and spicy foods, and brown skin as a phenotypic identity." (Berg Ramirez p. 40–41). As Guzman discusses, "signifiers most commonly associated with Latinidad produce a sense of authenticity within media texts", (p. 235). Ramirez continues to discuss how these signifiers of Latinidad do not necessarily mean they are stereotypical. In actuality, Latina/os may utilize these "signifiers" for self-identifying purposes. In terms of media portrayal, Hollywood has invested a lot of time and money to develop a general notion of "Latinidad" because marketers, advertisers and media content producers have found that they are a very bankable demographic, thus turned "Latinidad" and Latina/o culture and identity to a commodity. What is problematic about this is when creating this general notion, the diversity within this demographic becomes suppressed and flattened in a demographic that is very heterogeneous just so marketers, advertisers and media content producers can communicate their version of "authentic" racial identity to consumers. Consequently, this opens the space for stereotypes to be created and perpetuated.[65]
Others, such as Catherine Alexandra Carter andRodolfo Acuña, address the issue from a more global and political perspective, stressing the importance of terms likeLatino orHispanic for the marketing industry and for statistical ends:
The terms 'Hispanic' and 'Latino', although first created for the purpose of lumping together a diverse group of people and making them more economically marketable, have grown into something far more significant. Over time the legitimacy and accuracy of these terms have come to influence not only the functioning of the marketing industry, but the organization and structure of many other aspects of life.[66]
When and why the Latino identity came about is a more involved story. Essentially, politicians, the media, and marketers find it convenient to deal with the different U.S. Spanish-speaking people under one umbrella. However, many people with Spanish surnames contest the term 'Latino'. They claim it is misleading because no Latino or Hispanic nationality exists since no Latino state exists, so generalizing the term 'Latino' slights the various national identities included under the umbrella.[67]
Davila expands on the ramifications of the mass media's dominant use ofLatino orHispanic to categorize this demographic, "... the extent to which assertions of cultural differences intersect with dominant norms of American citizenship that give preeminence to white, monolingual, middle-class producers of and contributors to a political body defined in national terms. My concern is ... with how notions of citizenship, belonging, and entitlement are directly intertwined and predicated on dominant U.S. nationalist categories. Such categories conflate race, culture, and language with nationality, establishing the hierarchies and coordinates against which cultural and linguistic differences are ultimately evaluated (Ong 1999; Williams 1989). It is therefore these hierarchies that frame the discourses of Latinidad channeled in the media, as well as the media's treatment of language and what it may potentially communicate to and about Latino's claim to belonging, and in what terms they may or may not be within the political community of the United States." Consequently, this may leave issues, concerns, and topics relevant to this demographic left unheard, discussed and addressed. They are left invisible, therefore not only conflating the cultural differences, but also marginalizing them for the sake of convenience and marketability to the mass media. However, this is not to say this is a monolithic issue. Instead, this further gives incentive for the demographic to create a space in which they can transform these notions where the representations are more diverse, complex and authentic.[68]
Latino: People with roots in the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking Americas. This broader term, mostly used in the United States, is sometimes used as a replacement for Hispanic
[T]he term 'Latino' ... is more inclusive and descriptive than the term 'Hispanic.'
Being Latino is an American identity
The very termLatino has meaning only in reference to the U.S. experience. Outside the United States, we don't speak of Latinos; we speak of Mexicans, Cubans, Puerto Ricans, and so forth. Latinos are made in the USA.
'Latino' refers only to immigrants from Latin America (itself an offensive term to some indigenous people of that area)
For the U.S. government and others, Hispanic or Latino identity is voluntary, as in the United States Census, and in some market research
'Latino' is a self-designated term by members of different subgroups(subscription required)
Spanish/Hispanic/Latino is a self-designated classification
'Latino' is a self-chosen word that has come to refer to American-born peoples of Spanish/Portuguese and/or American-Indian descent
Latino is a self-identifying ethno-racial category(subscription required)
Terminology for Hispanics.—OMB does not accept the recommendation to retain the single term 'Hispanic.'Instead, OMB has decided that the term should be 'Hispanic or Latino.' Because regional usage of the terms differs—Hispanic is commonly used in the eastern portion of the United States, whereas Latino is commonly used in the western portion—this change may contribute to improved response rates.(Boldface in the original.)
In Texas, a Pew Hispanic Center poll found that 45% of Latinos prefer the term Hispanic and 8% prefer Latino. Note this leaves 47% of Latinos in Texas who prefer neither term