INCREASING, BUT IGNORED. Olivia Yuen, 29, a middle school art teacher
and well-known artist in Phoenix, who has a Chinese father and a Mexican
mother, works on a linocut piece in Laveen, Arizona, on May 21, 2024.
(AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
From The Asian Reporter, V34, #6 (June 3, 2024), page 10.
Asian American, Pacific Islander Latinos in the
U.S. see exponential growth, new analysis says
By Terry Tang
The Associated Press
The number of people of both Latino and Asian American or Pacific
Islander heritage has more than doubled in the last 20 years yet it
remains an often ignored demographic, according to researchers at UCLA.
The UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute analyzed Census Bureau
data within the last two decades. This included the 2000 census count as
well as American Community Survey 5-year estimates on population
characteristics from 2010 and 2022. Their analysis indicates people in
the United States who identify as Latino and Asian American or Pacific
Islander, or "AAPI Latinos," rose from 350,000 to 886,000 in that
period.
"We looked at people who identify themselves as Latino, who are of
Latino ethnicity and then among all these people, we looked at when they
fill out the race question, which race did they specify," said Jie Zong,
a senior research analyst. "If they specify they are of (an) Asian race,
we considered these individuals AAPI and Latinos."
This shows mixed-race Asians and Latinos are a more typical
occurrence now, said Kevin Kandamby, a graduate student in Chicano/a and
Central American Studies and a member of the research team. Part of the
reasoning in pursuing this was because this population remains
understudied.
"This is still a very niche topic. I’m happy to see that there’s more
and more people now understanding that this community is growing," said
Kandamby, who is Mexican and Sri Lankan.
Asian or Pacific Islander Latinos primarily tended to be either Asian
immigrants from Latin America or American-born citizens with both Latino
and Asian American or Pacific Islander parents, the analysis found.
The population’s trajectory has roots in a lengthy history of Latino
and Asian or Pacific Islander citizens interacting while meeting a labor
demand in the U.S., according to Kandamby. There are records of Chinese
immigrants, targeted by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, settling in
towns on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border and Punjabi and Mexican
farmworkers intermarrying in California’s Imperial Valley in the early
1900s.
In fact, grouped by state, a third of Asian Latino Americans reside
in California, the data brief states. Texas and Hawai‘i are the next
highest.
That doesn’t surprise Hawai‘i Democratic state representative Sonny
Ganaden, whose father is Filipino and mother is Mexican. The 43-year-old
self-described "Mexipino" got constant ribbing growing up in Orange
County, California, that he wasn’t truly Latino or Asian. In 2018, he
lost his first bid for the statehouse but came away with an invaluable
and "decolonizing" experience. Residents in his district, which includes
the heavily Filipino Kalihi neighborhood, embraced him.
"I was feeling like I was out of place in the American experience and
then I ran for office. Then I felt so like both accepted and accepting,"
Ganaden said. "It’s like a community chose me and I chose a community
and that was it."
Having two cultures resulting in the irony of feeling less visible is
a common thread. Olivia Yuen, 29, a middle school art teacher and
well-known artist in Phoenix, has a Chinese father and a Mexican mother.
When it came to which culture was more dominant in her household, it was
more of a draw.
"It definitely felt like ... I wasn’t Mexican enough to be considered
Mexican or wasn’t Chinese enough to be considered Chinese," Yuen said.
"And because my parents had raised me with a pretty western approach,
honestly, I felt like growing up, I identified mostly as American."
She was either questioned about her ethnic makeup or treated as fully
Asian. This led to her leaning into her Chinese side more.
"Now I acknowledge and both identify myself from both sides of my
heritage," Yuen said.
Growing up in the military city of Killeen, Texas, Isabella Chavez,
23, the daughter of a Korean mother and Mexican father, felt lucky
enough to be in a mixed community where friends helped her find her
identity. Having divorced parents and being raised by her Korean
grandmother had her surrounded by Korean culture. Chavez spent her
childhood going only to Korean churches, dry cleaners, and grocery
stores.
"I mostly say that I grew up as, like, an Asian American, even though
I don’t look Asian, by any means," Chavez said. "Being a mixed kid a lot
of the time like I found myself questioning like, well, I don’t look
Asian. So is it right to identify as Asian American?"
It wasn’t until she was older that Chavez realized she did not have
to pick one or the other. Living in San Antonio — with the vibrancy and
pride of the Latino community — has made it easier for to connect to her
Mexican heritage, she said.
There were plenty of great things about growing up Asian and Latino
for Ganaden. It meant a lot of relatives on both sides including an
abuela and a lola. And having Filipino or Mexican food on the table led
to tasty mash-ups like "day-old adobo in a tortilla."
"My favorite way to have adobo is with a side of rice and beans. So
it’s kind of funny to me that there are like a variety of new food
movements or like some random New York Times article about like,
‘Check out this new fusion.’ I’m like ... ‘Were you in my house?’" said
Ganaden, chuckling.
Other trends the data analysis found were "AAPI Latinos" placed
higher than Latinos overall but lower than all Asian Americans and
Pacific Islanders in educational attainment and homeownership. About a
third, or 33%, of AAPI Latinos have a bachelor’s degree or higher. In
comparison, 55% of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and 19% of
Latinos are at the same level.
The UCLA analysis also states the current Latino-Asian or Pacific
Islander population skews pretty young. Nearly half are age 18 or
younger.
Kandamby hopes to delve beyond the data and bring more attention to
the Asian or Pacific Islander and Latino identity. He also wants to show
how life experience can vary within this population.
"We have very distinctly different communities and understandings and
identities, but we still warrant the need to be included into the
conversations, to know that we have specific needs that may be different
from others," Kandamby said.
Associated Press writer Fernanda Figueroa in Austin, Texas
contributed to this report.
Tang is a Phoenix-based member of AP’s Race and Ethnicity team.
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