U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Commerce News

EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EST, FEBRUARY 13, 2002 (WEDNESDAY)


Mark Tolbert                                                CB02-CN.56
Public Information Office
(301) 457-3691/457- 3620 (fax)
(301) 457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: 2000usa@census.gov                                 Radio sound bites                                  

       California, Oklahoma Show Largest American Indian 
                  and Alaska Native Population

  California and Oklahoma were home to about 1-in-4 of the 4.1 million
American Indians and Alaska Natives (AIANs) reported in Census 2000, while
New York City and Los Angeles had the largest populations of this race
group among all cities, a new report by the Commerce Department's Census
Bureau shows.

  (The numbers in this news release consist of American Indians and Alaska
Natives who reported that race alone, plus those who reported that race in
combination with one or more other races.)

  About 628,000 people who identified themselves as AIANs lived in
California, while 392,000 resided in Oklahoma. Those two states, plus nine
others with an American Indian and Alaska Native population greater than
100,000 Arizona (293,000), Texas (216,000), New Mexico (191,000), New York
(172,000), Washington (159,000), North Carolina (132,000), Michigan
(124,000), Alaska (119,000), and Florida (118,000)  accounted for 62
percent of the total AIAN population, but only 44 percent of the total
population.

  Meanwhile, New York City, with 87,000 American Indians and Alaska
Natives, and Los Angeles, with 53,000, led all cities.

  The analysis, The American Indian and Alaska Native Population: 2000 [pdf], 
is one in a series of Census 2000 briefs. The report shows the number of
people who reported AIAN alone was 2.5 million and the number who reported
AIAN in combination with one or more other races was 1.6 million,
accounting for the 4.1 million total.

  Other highlights of the brief:

Regions

 -Of all respondents who reported American Indian and Alaska Native, 43 
  percent resided in the West; 31 percent lived in the South; 17 percent 
  lived in the Midwest; and 9 percent lived in the Northeast.

 -The West also was the region that had the highest proportion of 
  American Indians and Alaska Natives as part of its total population: 2.8 
  percent.

States

 -In 19 states, led by Alaska (19 percent), the American Indian and 
  Alaska Native population as a proportion of the total population 
  exceeded the national average (1.5 percent).

 -No Northeastern state had more than 1.5 percent of its population
  reporting as American Indian and Alaska Native.

 -Wyoming had the 44th largest American Indian and Alaska Native
  population, but ranked eighth in the percentage of American Indians and 
  Alaska Natives among its total population.

Counties

 -American Indians and Alaska Natives made up a majority of the 
  population in 26 counties nationwide 14 in the West and 12 in the 
  Midwest.
  
 -Alaska Natives made up more than half the population in several 
  boroughs and census areas (county equivalents) in Alaska.

Places

 -The 10 places with the largest AIAN populations, when combined, 
  accounted for 8.2 percent of the total American Indian and Alaska Native 
  population.

 -Of the 10 largest places in the United States, Phoenix (2.7 percent) 
  had the largest proportion of American Indians and Alaska Natives among 
  its total population, followed by Los Angeles (1.4 percent) and San 
  Diego and San Antonio (1.3 percent each).

Tribal groupings

 -Approximately 3.1 million or 74 percent of the 4.1 million people who 
  reported American Indian and Alaska Native alone or in combination
  identified themselves as belonging to a specific tribe.

 -Six of the 10 largest tribal groupings had 100,000 or more people: 
  Cherokee, 730,000; Navajo, 298,000; Latin American Indian, 181,000; 
  Choctaw, 159,000; Sioux, 153,000; and Chippewa, 150,000. Of all American 
  Indian tribal groupings in any combination, these six tribal groupings 
  represented 42 percent of all responses.

  Census 2000 race data are not directly comparable with data from the
1990 or earlier censuses because of the change that allowed respondents to
report more than one race.

  A complete list of previously released and upcoming Census 2000 briefs
may be found on the Census Bureau's Web site at http://www.census.gov/
population/www/cen2000/briefs.html. They cover topics such as race, 
Hispanic origin, gender and housing.


                              -X-


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: February 13, 2002 at 08:39:18 AM

Skip this main site 
navigation menu Newsroom | News Releases | Broadcast Services | Tip Sheets | Facts for Features | Minority Links