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Interracial Marriage in the African-American Community

21 February 2008

The last installment of the African-American culture study reveals that even though most African-Americans know an interracial couple, less than half (49%) said they would consider marrying someone outside of their race.

“In African-American culture, interracial marriage can be tricky. Acceptance is high, but there are minefields to overcome,” says Lawrence Martin Johnson Pratt, host of the Technocolorradioshow, a technology information FM radio show for African-Americans in New York (90.3FM WHCR). “In-laws are an issue for any couple, but African-American in-laws can be particularly critical. Racial loyalty is an issue, but generally it’s one the individual has to overcome. Many black women have an internalized stereotypical belief that non African-American men would not find them attractive. The good news is, in the last 20 years, racism, as a reason to shy away from interracial marriage, has become less and less of an issue.”
Survey data indicates that African-American males are entering into interracial relationships much more frequently. Those surveyed said in interracial relationships, the male is African-American 67% of the time vs. 33% for women.

We also asked respondents if they thought life as an interracial couple was more difficult:

Full results for the African-American Culture Study can be found on www.theafricanamericanvoice.com.

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