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Distinctively black names and mechanisms of discrimination : Evidence from the early 20th century

Castro, Catalina Anampa ; Warren, John Robert and Helgertz, Jonas LU (2025) In Social Science Research 126.
Abstract

What were the effects of having a distinctively African American-sounding name on educational attainment, occupation, income, marital status, and longevity in early 20th century America? How did those effects differ for people based on their phenotypical race/ethnicity? The findings of contemporary research have shown racialized names to be related to negative outcomes such as job interview callbacks, birth outcomes, and teacher expectations. Furthermore, previous research has shown that the consequences of race-specific names explain as much as 10% of the historical between-race mortality gap (Cook et al., 2016). Theoretically, we argue, names should have been less of a mechanism for racial discrimination in earlier eras of American... (More)

What were the effects of having a distinctively African American-sounding name on educational attainment, occupation, income, marital status, and longevity in early 20th century America? How did those effects differ for people based on their phenotypical race/ethnicity? The findings of contemporary research have shown racialized names to be related to negative outcomes such as job interview callbacks, birth outcomes, and teacher expectations. Furthermore, previous research has shown that the consequences of race-specific names explain as much as 10% of the historical between-race mortality gap (Cook et al., 2016). Theoretically, we argue, names should have been less of a mechanism for racial discrimination in earlier eras of American history. Using a sibling comparison design and linked administrative records, we hypothesize that there was little racial discrimination based on people's names in early 20th century America. We find that men with more African American-sounding names do no worse (or better) with respect to education, wages, occupation, or longevity than their brothers with less African American-sounding names; this finding holds for white and black men. This does not imply the absence of race-based discrimination in early 20th century America. Instead, it implies that people in this era discriminated based on something other than names and the race implied by those names.

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organization
publishing date
type
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publication status
published
subject
keywords
Education, Income, Mortality, Names, Occupation, Racism
in
Social Science Research
volume
126
article number
103136
publisher
Academic Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85212636229
  • pmid:39909625
ISSN
0049-089X
DOI
10.1016/j.ssresearch.2024.103136
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e4d7b042-e8d8-4175-b4ec-94ac52103737
date added to LUP
2025-02-26 15:57:23
date last changed
2025-07-17 03:48:52
@article{e4d7b042-e8d8-4175-b4ec-94ac52103737,
  abstract     = {{<p>What were the effects of having a distinctively African American-sounding name on educational attainment, occupation, income, marital status, and longevity in early 20th century America? How did those effects differ for people based on their phenotypical race/ethnicity? The findings of contemporary research have shown racialized names to be related to negative outcomes such as job interview callbacks, birth outcomes, and teacher expectations. Furthermore, previous research has shown that the consequences of race-specific names explain as much as 10% of the historical between-race mortality gap (Cook et al., 2016). Theoretically, we argue, names should have been less of a mechanism for racial discrimination in earlier eras of American history. Using a sibling comparison design and linked administrative records, we hypothesize that there was little racial discrimination based on people's names in early 20th century America. We find that men with more African American-sounding names do no worse (or better) with respect to education, wages, occupation, or longevity than their brothers with less African American-sounding names; this finding holds for white and black men. This does not imply the absence of race-based discrimination in early 20th century America. Instead, it implies that people in this era discriminated based on something other than names and the race implied by those names.</p>}},
  author       = {{Castro, Catalina Anampa and Warren, John Robert and Helgertz, Jonas}},
  issn         = {{0049-089X}},
  keywords     = {{Education; Income; Mortality; Names; Occupation; Racism}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Academic Press}},
  series       = {{Social Science Research}},
  title        = {{Distinctively black names and mechanisms of discrimination : Evidence from the early 20th century}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2024.103136}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ssresearch.2024.103136}},
  volume       = {{126}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}