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Latinos with dark skin face more discrimination, U.S. study finds

Two hands with different skin tones are seen in this stock image (Unsplash) Two hands with different skin tones are seen in this stock image (Unsplash)
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PHOENIX -

Skin tone impacts the everyday lives and the long-term success of Latinos in the United States, according to a Pew Research Center finding that comes as the issue of colourism has become more mainstream.

The nonpartisan research center surveyed 3,375 Latinos who live in the U.S., finding that 62 per cent say having darker skin hurts their chances of getting ahead while 59 per cent say having light skin helps them. The study was released Thursday.

 It comes just months after colourism -- discrimination based on skin tone, often from within someone's own ethnic group -- captured wide attention with the release of the movie "In the Heights," which was criticized for its lack of dark-skinned Afro Latinos in leading roles.

Over the last couple of years, racism has been at the forefront of the nation's attention, but colourism isn't deliberated as often.

Some social scientists believe this is in part because colourism highlights divisions within racial and ethnic groups.

Others add that colourism is a centuries-old worldwide issue that's notable in Latin American countries colonized by Spain and where white skin has long been considered superior to dark skin and Indigenous features. Many Latinos in the U.S. may have those internal biases.

The Pew study found that 57 per cent of Latinos say their skin tone affects their everyday life, and the majority of dark-skinned Hispanics have experienced discrimination because of it.

Nadia Y. Flores-Yeffal, associate professor of sociology at Texas Tech University, said the findings are backed up by years of research that shows darker-skinned people earn less money and face more bigotry.

The problem isn't just in the U.S. In Mexico, people with Indigenous features are looked down on, while white-skinned Mexicans are among the most powerful politicians, businesspeople and celebrities.

The way people with dark skin are portrayed in movies and in TV -- if at all -- also impacts how we perceive them, Flores-Yeffal said. "In the Heights" was hardly the exception -- in most American media, darker Latinos are overrepresented in background roles or as gangsters, while lighter ones are more likely to have prominent roles, even as Latinos in general are underrepresented.

Flores-Yeffal says colorism has been going on for centuries. "And it doesn't look like it's going anywhere," she said.

Laura E. Gomez, a law professor and author of "Inventing Latinos: A New Story of American Racism," lauded the Pew study, saying it was based on rigorous data.

For Gomez, even talking about colourism is a good step toward solving the issue. While some Latinos may not feel comfortable talking about internal divisions, they are synonymous with racism in general, she said.

"You can't choose one or the other. In order to combat anti-Latino racism, we must talk about racism within the Latino community," Gomez said.

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