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Race and Ethnicity Concepts

Sociology
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Race and Ethnicity Concepts

Sociology
01 May 2026

Race and Ethnicity: Sociological Concepts

The Concept of Race

In everyday life, “race” is often treated as a biological reality — the idea that human beings are naturally divided into distinct categories based on physical characteristics (skin colour, hair texture, facial features). Sociologists reject this view.

Sociologically, race is a social construction — a category created and maintained by social processes, not by nature. Key points:

  • There is more genetic variation within so-called racial groups than between them (geneticist Richard Lewontin, 1972)
  • The physical traits used to classify race (skin colour, etc.) are superficial adaptations to climate, not markers of deeper biological difference
  • The meaning assigned to racial categories varies across time and place (e.g. Irish people were once not considered “white” in the United States)
  • Race has real social consequences — despite having no biological basis, racial categories produce discrimination, inequality, and identity

KEY TAKEAWAY: Race is not a biological fact but a social category. It is real in its social consequences (discrimination, inequality, identity) even though it has no biological basis. This is what sociologists mean by a social construction.

The Concept of Ethnicity

Ethnicity refers to shared cultural identity based on common ancestry, language, religion, customs, traditions, and a sense of collective identity. Unlike race, ethnicity emphasises cultural rather than physical characteristics.

Key features of ethnicity:

  • Subjective: ethnicity depends on a sense of belonging and shared identity — it is not simply assigned from outside
  • Cultural: defined by shared practices, language, food, religion, and history
  • Fluid: ethnic identities can change over time, across generations, and in response to migration and cultural contact
  • Multiple: individuals can hold more than one ethnic identity simultaneously
Dimension Race Ethnicity
Basis Physical characteristics (socially assigned) Cultural identity (shared and claimed)
Origin Social construction by dominant groups Shared cultural heritage, self-identification
Fluidity Relatively fixed by social assignment Can change over generations
Example “Black,” “white” in racial classification Greek-Australian, Vietnamese-Australian, Yorta Yorta

COMMON MISTAKE: Students often conflate race and ethnicity. Race refers to socially constructed physical categories; ethnicity refers to shared cultural identity. In practice, the two often overlap and interact — racial categorisation can shape ethnic identity, and ethnic groups can be racialised.

Race and Ethnicity in the Australian Context

Australia has a complex history with both concepts:

  • Racial classification was used to implement the White Australia Policy (1901–1973) — immigration was restricted based on racial criteria
  • Ethnicity became a key policy concept with the shift to multiculturalism in the 1970s — recognition of cultural diversity replaced racial hierarchy
  • Contemporary Australian society still experiences racialisation of ethnic groups (e.g. discrimination against people of African or Middle Eastern background)

VCAA FOCUS: Be able to define both concepts clearly and explain the distinction. VCAA questions often ask students to apply these concepts to a specific group or context — practise doing so with at least one specific Australian ethnic group.

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