TY - JOUR
T1 - Different but Somewhat Similar
T2 - Panethnicity, Group Boundaries, and Dating Preferences among Asian and Latino College Students
AU - Feliciano, Cynthia
AU - Hijara, Cilka Mayumi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© American Sociological Association 2024.
PY - 2024/7
Y1 - 2024/7
N2 - Few studies of romantic unions focus on interethnic preferences among Asians and Latinos to discern the salience of panethnicity in dating. Using unique mixed-methods data, which disaggregates the ethnic identity of respondents and their preferred partners, we examine patterns of panethnic and non-panethnic dating choices among Asian and Latino college students and their explanations for their preferences. We find that Asian college students, except for Filipinos, desire co-panethnic partners more than Latinos do, although only certain co-panethnics are preferred. Students use narratives about culture, phenotype, family, and familiarity in different ways to justify their preferences. In some cases, these criteria guide them to preferences in line with common understandings of where panethnic boundaries lie. In others, preferences reveal alternative conceptions of group boundaries based on phenotypic and cultural differences with co-panethnics or similarities across panethnic lines. These findings complicate existing understandings of panethnicity and challenge the durability of panethnic boundaries.
AB - Few studies of romantic unions focus on interethnic preferences among Asians and Latinos to discern the salience of panethnicity in dating. Using unique mixed-methods data, which disaggregates the ethnic identity of respondents and their preferred partners, we examine patterns of panethnic and non-panethnic dating choices among Asian and Latino college students and their explanations for their preferences. We find that Asian college students, except for Filipinos, desire co-panethnic partners more than Latinos do, although only certain co-panethnics are preferred. Students use narratives about culture, phenotype, family, and familiarity in different ways to justify their preferences. In some cases, these criteria guide them to preferences in line with common understandings of where panethnic boundaries lie. In others, preferences reveal alternative conceptions of group boundaries based on phenotypic and cultural differences with co-panethnics or similarities across panethnic lines. These findings complicate existing understandings of panethnicity and challenge the durability of panethnic boundaries.
KW - Asians
KW - dating
KW - Filipinos
KW - Latinos
KW - panethnicity
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85182453195
U2 - 10.1177/23326492231222175
DO - 10.1177/23326492231222175
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85182453195
SN - 2332-6492
VL - 10
SP - 353
EP - 370
JO - Sociology of Race and Ethnicity
JF - Sociology of Race and Ethnicity
IS - 3
ER -