Note on disaggregated data: Data disaggregation by race and ethnicity is critical to identifying pressing social concerns and developing effective, equitable policy solutions. The League strives to be as explicit as possible when discussing race and ethnicity, but often a lack of disaggregated data prevents us from knowing one’s identity. Many data sources omit certain races and ethnicities or collapse them into an “Other” category. This renders these groups invisible and masks notable economic, social and health disparities both between and within them. This affects American Indians/Alaska Natives, Asians, people of Middle Eastern and North African descent, Pacific Islanders and Native Hawaiians in particular. Throughout this report and as standard practice, we present disaggregated data whenever it is available, and we continue to advocate for disaggregation to the greatest extent possible by data collection and research entities.

 

How the League uses language to describe race, ethnicity or identity: To reflect the evolution of language and varied preferences among different communities, generations, cultures and regions, the League alternates between a variety of terms, including person-first and identity-first language as well as binary and non-binary language. In referencing specific data, the League uses the exact terminology from the original source. Readers can explore information on these terms at www.mlpp.org/language.

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