

It may have been driven, by the values of an emerging black middle class, a trend that could be jeopardized by the current economic meltdown.
The Census Bureau attributed an indeterminate amount of the increase to revised definitions adopted in 2007, which identify as parents any man and woman living together, whether or not they are married or the child’s biological parents.
According to the bureau’s estimates, the number of black children living with two parents was 59 percent in 1970, falling to 42 percent in 1980, 38 percent in 1990 and 35 percent in 2004. In 2007, the latest year for which data is available, it was 40 percent.
For non-Hispanic whites, the figure in 2007 was 77 percent, down from 90 percent in 1970.
While expressing skepticism about an increase so large in such a short time in the number of black children living with two parents, a number of experts said the shift was potentially significant.
“It’s a positive change,” said Prof. Robert J. Sampson, the chairman of Harvard’s sociology department. “It’s been hidden.”
5 comments:
Hmm!.. Despite your claims of the gay lobby's strength and influence huh!
Teaching responsibility is a mutha... Isn't it Plaxibro
ah! you stole my post!
Did that dude really give that quote? That's just sad.
Nah Big Man. He did not.
It's a parody. SNL style.
"parents any man and woman living together, whether or not they are married or the child’s biological parents"
Lol, wtf? So, a sister living with her brother - or 2 roommates -would now get defined as "parents" by the Census? Buahahaa, what a pathetic fudge-factoring attempt!
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