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Lots of people dont even use Asian to define Indians/Pakistanis and Bangladeshis typically lumping them all in as "Indian" I know In England and Europe they use Asian to primarily describe Middle Eastern and Indian people. |
South Asian
Chicago 265,485 Washington 238,503 Dallas 202,067 Houston 185,228 Philadelphia 141,995 Atlanta 138,580 Seattle 103,260 Boston 102,067 Detroit 99,380 |
every ohio city and county ranked for asians --
hats off to suburban columbus dublin, oh -- you are the winner: https://www.cleveland.com/datacentra..._county_8.html |
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How significant is the population who are not single-response Asian (more than one Asian ancestry) in most cities, and do some places have more than others (say, those where a "pan-Asian American" identity has developed)? I'd imagine on the mainland US there'd be more single-ancestry responses but places like Hawaii had long enough generations of Asian immigration that many are mixed between Asian groups (kind of like how many white Americans are part Irish, part German, Italian etc.).
How big is the share of people who are "Asian" but more than one type of "Asian" vs. "mixed Asian and a non-Asian group" relative to single origin responses? |
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As of 2018 these were the largest Asian alone ethnic groups in the US: Chinese, except Taiwanese 4,217,892 Asian Indian 4,161,088 Filipino 2,920,160 Vietnamese 1,862,395 Korean 1,468,279 Japanese 782,776 Pakistani 487,937 Hmong 305,323 Cambodian 240,379 Thai 218,514 Bangladeshi 203,845 Laotian 203,494 Burmese 178,490 Taiwanese 178,020 Nepalese 167,468 Indonesian 70,851 Sri Lankan 52,183 Bhutanese 30,162 Mongolian 22,091 Malaysian 20,599 Okinawan 3,715 Other Asian, specified 6,717 Other Asian, not specified 175,607 Two or more Asian 437,213 Total Asian alone or in Combination (2018): 22,942,648 Chinese, except Taiwanese 5,143,982 Asian Indian 4,506,308 Filipino 4,089,570 Vietnamese 2,162,610 Korean 1,894,131 Japanese 1,542,195 Pakistani 526,956 Thai 329,343 Hmong 320,164 Cambodian 300,360 Laotian 262,229 Taiwanese 213,774 Bangladeshi 213,372 Burmese 189,250 Nepalese 175,005 Indonesian 116,869 Sri Lankan 61,416 Malaysian 35,716 Bhutanese 32,130 Mongolian 28,538 Okinawan 17,389 Other Asian, specified 8,851 Other Asian, not specified 772,490 Burmese/Myanmarese, Nepalese/Nepali & Bangladeshi are among the fastest growing of the relatively newer Asian ethnic/national groups in the U.S. To put the enormity of the Asian alone population into context if they were to (hypothetically-speaking) form their own country it would rank as the 63rd largest in the World -- just below Chile. |
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The vast majority of auto jobs are with the suppliers and engineering concerns, not the car companies themselves. |
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Historically speaking, Japan has always tended to see those who go overseas as "betraying" Japanese culture to some extent - which is why for example the Japanese Brazilians who have moved back to Japan have not been embraced. This stands in contrast to the Chinese, who will continue to accept people as being ethnically Chinese even if they're from families who have lived abroad for centuries. |
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There are almost no real Japanese immigrants in America anymore. Some Japanese girls marry local American guys, and some really adventurous young Japanese settle for the freedom they find here. But not in large numbers. Brazilian Japanese are looked down on in Japan because they are perceived as being poor, uneducated, and from a poor country. For example I had a Brazilian-Japanese friend who was working at a bank in NY, visit his distant relatives in Kobe, and they were very circumspect about him probably because they thought he would ask them for money or a place to stay. Actually he made much more than they did. Japanese Americans aren't so much looked down on in Japan as just not considered Japanese at all. Unless they speak fluent, unaccented Japanese. "Kitchen Japanese" doesn't cut it over there. |
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And these figures reaffirm my earlier observations... NYC has a very, very poor showing of Vietnamese. Houston, Dallas, DC, Seattle, and San Diego (at 1/7th the population) have larger Vietnamese communities. Ditto with Koreans and the Bay Area. |
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back when i lived in cols i recall a couple japanese restaurants, but that was about it. nowadays, the japanese presence in dublin, ohio is growing and is much more than marysville auto. for one thing i imagine they like the golf, with jack nicklaus' home course muirfield being there lol.
this was surprising: Japan is the No. 1 foreign investor in Ohio, with businesses providing about 71,000 jobs, or 30 percent of all employment from foreign companies in the state. https://www.cityscenecolumbus.com/co...ese-community/ https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt...n-central-ohio as for integration, japanese kids get ell services of course and i see nowadays japanese is offered as a language option in the city schools. there is also at least one active japanese saturday school. http://columbushoshuko.com/wordpress1/541-2/ |
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He also told me about OTAI (?), which is what Japanese nationals use for health insurance when they are abroad, at least in the LA area. |
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