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Native
American Press/Ojibwe
News
U.S. Census 2000 report: 81,074 “Indians” in
Minnesota
By Clara NiiSka - February 15, 2002
According to a report, “The American Indian and Alaska Native
Population: 2000,” released on February 13th by the U.S. Census, there
were 81,074 people who identified themselves as “American Indian and
Alaska Native” in Minnesota. Of these, 26,107 people said they were
mixed-race. This is a 162% increase from the 49,909 Minnesotans who
categorized themselves as “American Indian and Alaska Native” for the
1990 census enumerators. In 1990, about 1.14% of the people in
Minnesota said they were “Indian.” In 2000, about 1.65% said that they
were either “Indian” or mixed-race including Indian.
The total Indian population in the United States in 1990
was 1,959,234. In 2000, the total “Indian” and mixed-Indian population
had more than doubled, to 4,119,301 people. Statistics analyzing age
distribution by “race” have not yet been released by the Census Bureau.
The “Indians” and mixed-race Indians recorded on the
2000 census include 729,533 “Cherokees,” 291,197 “Navajos,” and 180,940
“Latin American Indians.” These three largest groups accounted for more
than 1.2 million of the Indians recorded on the 2000 census. The Census
Bureau also reported 153,360 “Sioux” and 149,669 “Chippewa.”
“Racial” designations recorded on the census are
‘self-designations,’ meaning that if a person claims to be “Indian,”
that is how the census-taker will record that person’s “race” on the
official census forms. The categories used in the 2000 census reflect
the increasingly ‘mixed’ population of the United States, and people
could claim to be as many “races” as they wanted on the census.
According to the Census Bureau’s analysis of the Census
2000 data, 43% of people reported themselves as Indians lived in the
west, 31% in the south, 17% in the Midwest, and 9% in the Northeast.
Minnesota’s 1.65% “Indian” population was slightly
higher than the national average of 1.5%, and the Minneapolis, with
3.3% Indian and mixed-race, ranked 7th among U.S. cities’ percentage of
Indian population. Anchorage, Alaska was first with 10.4%, followed by
Tulsa, Oklahoma (7.7%), Oklahoma City (5.7%), Albuquerque, New Mexico
(4.9%), Green Bay, Wisconsin (4.1%), and Tacoma, Washington (3.6%).
The cities with the highest total Indian populations
were New York, with 87,241 Indians, and Los Angeles, with 53,092.
Part of the Census Bureau’s recently released map
detailing distribution of “Indians” by county is published in this
issue of Press/ON.
“The American Indian and Alaska Native Population: 2000”
is posted online at http://www.census.gov/prod/2002pubs/c2kbr01-15.pdf.
Additional U.S. Census data can be accessed via the Census Bureau’s
website at http://www.census.gov/.
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