Eng-lân-hē Bí-kok-lâng

Eng-lân-hē Bí-kok-lâng (English Americans) mā hō chò Anglo Bí-kok-lâng (Anglo-Americans), sī ka-tī ia̍h chó͘-sian siōng-bô ū pō͘-hūn sī Eng-lân lâi-oân ê lâng. Khah-chá tī 1980 nî ê phó͘-cha lāi, ū 26.34% ê jîn-kháu pò ka-tī sī Eng-lâng-hē. Nā sī chiàu 2014 nî Bí-kok Siā-lí Tiâu-cha (American Community Survey), sī chiàm Bí-kok jîn-kháu ê 7.6%[1]. Chóng-sī chit-ê sò͘-jī chin ū khó-lêng sī pí sū-si̍t-siōng khah kiám, in-ūi Eng-lân-hē ê cho̍k-kûn tiāⁿ ùi jîn-kháu tiāu-cha lāi ka-ná pò ka-tī sī "Bí-kok-hē" (American)[2][3][4][5] , nā sī in ū kî-tha Au-chiu cho̍k-hē sin-hūn, koh ē jīn khah óa chòe-kīn he̍k-chiá sī te̍k-sû ê lâi-goân[6].

2000 nî phó͘-cha lāi-bīn Eng-lân-hē hun-pò͘ chêng-hêng.

Chham-khó siu-kái

  1. "Selected Social Characteristics in the United States (DP02): 2014 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. February 22, 2015 khòaⁿ--ê. 
  2. Sharing the Dream: White Males in a Multicultural America By Dominic J. Pulera.
  3. Reynolds Farley, 'The New Census Question about Ancestry: What Did It Tell Us?', Demography, Vol. 28, No. 3 (August 1991), pp. 414, 421.
  4. Stanley Lieberson and Lawrence Santi, 'The Use of Nativity Data to Estimate Ethnic Characteristics and Patterns', Social Science Research, Vol. 14, No. 1 (1985), pp. 44-46.
  5. Stanley Lieberson and Mary C. Waters, "Ethnic Groups in Flux: The Changing Ethnic Responses of American Whites", Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 487, No. 79 (September 1986), pp. 82-86.
  6. Mary C. Waters, Ethnic Options: Choosing Identities in America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990), p. 36.