Comparison chart
Ethnicity versus Race comparison chart
Definition
Ethnicity
An ethnic group or ethnicity
is a population group whose
members identify with each
other on the basis of
common nationality or
shared cultural traditions.
Significance
Ethnicity connotes
shared cultural traits
and a shared group
history. Some ethnic
groups also share
linguistic or religious
traits, while others
share a common group
history but not a
common language
or religion.
Genealogy
Ethnicity is defined in terms
of shared genealogy,
whether actual or presumed.
Typically, if people believe
they descend from a
particular group, and they
want to be associated with
that group, then they are in
fact members of that group.
Distinguishing
Factors
Ethnic groups
distinguish themselves
differently from one
time period to another.
They typically seek to
define themselves but
also are defined by the
stereotypes of
dominant groups.
Nationalism
In 19th century, there was
development of the political
ideology of ethnic
nationalism -- creating
nations based on a
presumed shared ethnic
origins (e.g. Germany, Italy,
Sweden...)
Race
The term race refers to the
concept of dividing people into
populations or groups on the
basis of various sets of
physical characteristics (which
usually result from genetic
ancestry).
Race presumes shared
biological or genetic traits,
whether actual or asserted. In
the early 19th century, racial
differences were ascribed
significance in areas of
intelligence, health, and
personality. There is no
evidence validating these
ideas.
Racial categories result from a
shared genealogy due to
geographical isolation. In the
modern world this isolation
has been broken down and
racial groups have mixed.
Races are assumed to be
distinguished by skin color,
facial type, etc. However, the
scientific basis of racial
distinctions is very weak.
Scientific studies show that
racial genetic differences are
weak except in skin color.
In 19th century, the concept of
nationalism was often used to
justify the domination of one
race over another within a
specific nation.
In the last decades of
the 20th century, in
the U.S. and in most
nations, the legal
Legal System
system as well as the
official ideology
prohibited ethnicbased discrimination.
Often brutal conflicts
between ethnic groups
have existed
throughout history and
across the world. But
Conflicts
most ethnic groups in
fact get along
peacefully within one
another in most
nations most of the
time.
Conflict between Tamil
and
Sinhalese populations
Examples of conflict
in Sri Lanka, or the
Hutu and Tutsi people
in Rwanda.
In the last decades of the 20th
century, the legal system as
well as the official ideology
emphasized racial equality.
Racial prejudice remains a
continuing problem throughout
the world. However, there are
fewer race-based conflicts in
the 21st century than in the
past.
Conflict between white and
African-American people in
the U.S., especially during the
civil rights movement.