Arikah Map

Asian (people)


Asian

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Asian (people):Chiang Kai-shekAsian (people):José Rizal
Total population ~3.8 billion
57% of the world's population
Regions with significant populations

East Asia: ~1,539,265,477
23.7% of the world's population


South Asia: ~1,459,769,125
22.5% of the world's population


Southeast Asia: ~517,277,152
8% of the world's population

Language Bengali, Burmese, Dzongkha, Divehi, Hindi, Hmong, Iu Mien, Japanese, Khmer, Korean, Lao, Malay, Mongolian, Nepali, Sinhala, Thai, Tibetan, Vietnamese, Chinese languages, East Timorese languages, , Indonesian languages, Philippine languages, Singaporean languages, Taiwanese languages, English, Portuguese, others
Religion Animism, Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Daoism, Hinduism, Islam, Jainism, Shamanism, Shintoism, Sikhism, others <tr>
<th style="background-color:#fee8ab;">Related ethnic groups</th><td style="background-color:#fff6d9;">Asian American, Asian Australian, Asian Canadian, Asian Latino, Asian South African, and British Asian</td>

</tr>

The term Asian people (also Orientals, Asians, Asian race, Asian Continental Ancestry Group[1] or just Asian) is, strictly, a demonym for people from Asia; in actuality, however, it is generally used differently in different countries to refer to people from a particular region or subregion of Asia.[2][3] In the United States, it refers most commonly to peoples of predominantly East Asian or Southeast Asian ancestry; however in the United Kingdom, Asian usually refers only to South Asians.[4][5] Due to political lobbying by South Asians in the 1980s,[6] the U.S. census now groups South Asians with East and Southeast Asians, but this is not reflected in common usage. The Australian Census also includes Central Asia although this region is often considered to be part of the Middle East.[7] Middle Eastern people are usually not considered an Asian people,[8] though the term "Asian" originally referred to Middle Eastern people in antiquity. This term's modern application varies by region, but people described as Asian generally inhabit or have origins in the countries listed below (not including those of Southwest or Central Asia).


Contents

Common definition

According to the definition below, about four billion people or more than 57% of the world's population is Asian.[9] The region to which the term applies includes the two most populated countries in the world: the People's Republic of China with 1.3 billion people[10] and the Republic of India with 1.1 billion people.[11] The term Asian also includes the largest single ethnic group in the world, the Han Chinese, who numbered over 1.16 billion in 2004 and made up about 20% of the world population.[12]

Southeast AsiaSouth AsiaEast Asia
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"Asian" in Western countries

"Asian" in Australia

Asian (people):Asians on Australian Census 2006 3

Asian Australian
ancestries


Asian (people):Flag of Australia.svg
according the groups with the word "Asian"
in them in the
Australian 2006 Census


Southern Asian"
"Central and
"North-East Asian"
"South-East Asian"
Indonesia
Malaysia
Singapore
Philippines
Vietnam
Cambodia
Laos
Burma
Thailand
Hmong
Brunei
East Timor
India
Maldives
Sri Lanka
Nepal
Bhutan
Bangladesh
Pakistan
Afghanistan
Tajikstan
Kyrgystan
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan
Kazakhstan


Japan
South Korea
North Korea
China
Mongolia
Taiwan
Main article: Asian Australian

The Australian Census includes four regions of Asia in its official definition. Defined by the 2006-2011 Australian Census, three "broad groups" have the word Asian included in their name: "Central and Southern Asians", "South-East Asians" and "North-East Asians". Russians are classified with "Southern and Eastern Europeans" while Middle Easterners are classified with "North African and Middle Easterners".[13]

"Asian" in the UK and Anglophone Africa

Main article: British Asian

In the United Kingdom and certain parts of Anglophone Africa, especially East Africa, the term "Asian," though it can refer to the continent of Asia as a whole,[14] is more commonly associated with people of South Asian origin, particularly Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis and Sri Lankans.[15] Those of East Asian origin, such as the Chinese or Vietnamese (referred to as Oriental in the UK and the Commonwealth), are usually not included in the term. This is reflected in the "ethnic group" section of UK census forms, which treat "Asian" and "Chinese" as separate (see British Asian).[16] Most respondents to the UK 2001 Census of non-Chinese East Asian and Southeast Asian descent chose to write-in their ethnicity in the "Other Ethnic Group" category rather than the "Other Asian" category, reflecting the association of the word Asian in the UK with South Asian.[17]

The United Kingdom and Anglophone Africa[18] are two places in the Western world where the word "Asian" is used primarily to identify people from the Indian subcontinent, although in Africa Asian can refer to East Asians as well.[19] Of course, in Asia, the word "Asian" has a more localized definition when describing people by face, and is more inclusive when describing Asians by culture. Due to the term's contested definition in British English, the use of the term "South Asian" is used for clarity in discussions in the United Kingdom on colonialism, discrimination, and migration[20] or when the content of its parameters may become mistakenly conflated with those of East Asian descent. [21]

"Asian" in Canada

Main article: Asian Canadian

In Canada, Asian refers to people from the Far East, Southeast Asia,[22] and the Indian Subcontinent.[23] Like the United States, in Canada the term Asian generally refers to the East Asian Canadians since they were the first Asian immigrant groups into Canada.[24]

"Asian" in the United States

Main article: Asian American
Asian (people):3 Regions Far East Southeast Asia Indian Subcontinent 2
Asian American
ancestries
Asian (people):Flag of the United States.svg
as defined in the
United States 2000 Census
The Indian
Subcontinent
The Far East
Southeast Asia
Indonesia
Malaysia
Singapore
Philippines
Vietnam
Cambodia
Laos
Burma
Thailand
Hmong
Brunei
East Timor
India
Maldives
Sri Lanka
Nepal
Bhutan
Bangladesh
Pakistan
Japan
South Korea
North Korea
China
Mongolia
Taiwan

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For purposes of the U.S. Census, the term "Asian" is a race defined as "people who have origins in the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian Subcontinent".[25] Respondents can also report more specific ancestry, such as Asian Indian, Chinese, Taiwanese, Filipino, Korean, Japanese, Malaysian, Indonesian, Vietnamese, Burmese, Pakistani, Laotian, Thai, Bhutanese, and so on, including "Other Asian". Someone reporting these ancestries but no race will be classified as "Asian". Central Asian Americans were classified as "Asiatic" on the 1910 US Census which legally hindered their immigration along with other Asians. Central Asian Turkish Americans were the targets of anti-Asian hysteria during the "yellow race crisis".[26]

United States v. Bhagat Singh Thind 261 U.S. 204 (1923)[27] was a case in which the United States Supreme Court decided that Bhagat Singh Thind, a native of India, could not be a naturalized citizen of the United States, despite the fact that a number anthropologists had defined members of the Indian subcontinent as being members of the Caucasian race. The ruling followed a decision in Takao Ozawa v. United States where the same court had ruled that a light-skinned native of Japan could not count as "white", because "White" meant "Caucasian",[28] establishing White and Caucasian to be interchangeable terms for a single people of whom neither Japanese Americans nor Indian Americans are included.[29] According to a social scientist Rosanne Skirble, the term Caucasian is becoming less frequently used in favor of White American or European American.[30] Although the restrictions on immigration and naturalization of East and South Asians were later repealed, the practice of classifying East and South Asians in an "Asian" category has its roots in this period. West Asian Americans were classified as White since they never constituted a large immigrant group that had significant physical difference from European Americans.[31]

According to Sharon M. Lee in her 1998 publication, for many non-Asian Americans in the United States (in 1998) Asian American means Oriental, Chinese American or Japanese American. This is due to the Chinese and Japanese immigrants being the first immigrants into the United States. Today, with the increasing demographic of Korean Americans, South Asian Americans and Southeast Asian Americans the definition among United States citizens of who is Asian American is expanding,[32] but in common usage Asian has only additionally included Filipino Americans, Vietnamese Americans, and Korean Americans.[33]

"West Asians"

Asian (people):BBC News World Divisions map 2

BBC
News
regional
classifications


Americas
Africa
Europe
Middle East
Asia-Pacific
South Asia

The name Asia is probably derived from ancient Assyrian.[34] It therefore originally referred to the regions now called "West Asia" and "Central Asia", the Sinai Peninsula to Persia and Asia Minor to Arabia.

Clovis Maksound, Director for the Organization of Global South, argues that the term "Middle East" is a Eurocentric moniker denoting the region between Europe and East Asia, because it denies the Middle East's connection with Muslim North Africa.[35] In English parlance, Western Asians like Iranians and Arabs,[36] and the Central Asians of the former Soviet Republics are not referred to as "Asian".[37]

Orientals and the Orient

The term "Oriental" (from the Latin word for "Eastern")[38] was originally used in Europe in reference to the Near East. It was later extended to the rest of Asia, but came to refer to East Asians and Southeast Asians in the 19th and 20th century US,[39] where most Asians were Chinese (and later Japanese and Filipino). By the late 20th century, the term had gathered associations in North America with older attitudes now seen as outmoded, and was replaced with the term "Asian" as part of the updating of language concerning social identities,[40] which critics have derided as political correctness.[41] Elsewhere in the English-speaking world, "Oriental" does not have such associations (except perhaps in Australia and among those exposed to the US use of the term).

Asian Russians (Kalmyks, Tuvans, and others)

Most of Russia's huge territory is in Asia, though the majority of its population is in Europe and ethnically Slavic. Depending on context, Russian people may be considered European or mixed according to their individual ethnic nationality, ancestry, or appearance. They may be considered European or Asian based on their current or recent place of residence or just by the state in which they happen to reside (and whether it extends into Europe or Asia).[42]The word Eurasian is also often used to describe Russia's position in the world.See also transcontinental nation.[43]

Russians are generally not included in the term "Asian";[44] one exception being the Kalmyks, the only Buddhist Asians living in East Europe in the republic of Kalmykia, which is a federal subject of Russia.[45]

Pacific Islanders

In normal usage Asian does not refer to the people from the Pacific Islands who are usually called Pacific Islanders.[46] The term "Asians and Pacific Islanders" or "Asia/Pacific" was used on the 1990 US Census.[47] As late as 2001, they were consided by most Americans to be the same racial group as Asians due to a perception of their implicit contrast to "whiteness".[48] However, in the 2000 US Census, many Pacific Islanders did not consider themselves the same social identity as Asians, and classified themselves separately.

Individuals classified as Asian

Influential Asians

Only twenty-two people in the entire world have been repeatedly ranked among the world's 100 most influential people by Time magazine and three of them are Asian (not counting West Asians). One is the Dalai Lama who made the Heroes & Icons section in 2005 & 2004.[1] The other two are Kim Jong Il and Hu Jintao who both appeared on the list in 2005 and 2004 and whose influence was recognized in the Leaders & Revolution category.[2] Time magazine named Mahatma Gandhi the Man of the Year in 1930, and the runner-up to Albert Einstein as "Person of the Century" in 2000.[3] Readers should note that these magazines and publications are Western publications, and not necessarily from an Asian viewpoint.

Several other Asians have recently appeared on the list but only once. These include Yao Ming who was listed as among the Heroes & Icons in 2004, and Wu Yi who was recognized among the Leaders & Revolutionaries in 2004.

Several Time 100 members have come from India including B.K.S. Iyengar who was recognized as one of 2004’s Heroes & Icons, Aishwarya Rai, the only South Asian woman to ever make the list, who was recognized as an artist and entertainer in 2004[4], and in the Leaders & Revolutionaires category Manmohan Singh and Atal Behari Vajpayee who made the list in 2004 and 2005 respectively.[5] Pakistan’s leader Pervez Musharraf made the list in 2006.[6]

Ashwarya Rai is not the only Asian entertainer to recently make the list. Zhang Ziyi and Rain both qualified in 2005 and 2006 respectively.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ Time. Heros & Icons. 2005. November 1 2006. [1]
  2. ^ Time. Leaders and Revolutionaries. 2005. November 1 2006. [2]
  3. ^ McGeary, Johanna. The Time 100. Time 100 - Person of the Century Runner-Up: Mohandas Gandhi. 2000. October 31 2006. [3]
  4. ^ Time. Artists and Entertainers. 2004. November 1 2006. [4]
  5. ^ Time. Leaders and Revolutionaries. 2005. November 1 2006. [5]
  6. ^ Time. The People who Shape Our World. 2006. November 2 2006. [6]
  7. ^ Time. The People who Shape Our World. 2006. November 2 2006. [7]

Categories


Cleanup from November 2006 | All pages needing cleanup | Ethnic groups in Asia | Asian people | Race

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