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Latinoh – Works 100%
Latinoh – Works 100%
Data from the Pew Research Center reveal a complex picture. Latino household income has risen steadily, and high school graduation rates have improved dramatically—reaching 80% in 2022. However, significant gaps remain. Only 18% of Latinos hold a bachelor’s degree compared to 36% of non-Hispanic whites. Moreover, wealth disparities are stark: the median Latino household has roughly 20 cents for every dollar of white household wealth (Federal Reserve, 2021).
[Your Name] Course: [e.g., Sociology 101 / Ethnic Studies 200] Date: [Current Date] latinoh
The Latino population—people of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, Dominican, Central and South American descent—has grown to over 62 million, making up nearly 19% of the U.S. population (US Census Bureau, 2022). Yet media and political discourse often reduce this heterogeneous group to a single voting bloc or a homogeneous “minority.” This paper analyzes three key dimensions of the Latino experience: (1) the construction of pan-ethnic identity, (2) patterns of socioeconomic mobility and persistent inequality, and (3) the rise of Latino political power. It concludes that effective engagement with Latino communities requires disaggregating data and centering lived experiences. Data from the Pew Research Center reveal a complex picture