Racial and Ethnic Groups, 16th edition
Published by Pearson (December 4, 2023) © 2025
- Richard T. Schaefer DePaul University
eTextbook
- Anytime, anywhere learning with the Pearson+ app
- Easy-to-use search, navigation and notebook
- Simpler studying with flashcards
- Hardcover, paperback or looseleaf edition
- Affordable rental option for select titles
Revel
- Inspire engagement through active learning
- Provide an immersive reading experience
- Assess student progress with performance insights
For courses in Race and Ethnic Relations.
Highlight the changing dynamics of the US population
Racial and Ethnic Groups helps students view race and ethnic relations in a sociohistorical context, so they can understand the past and see how to shape the future. Author Richard Schaefer's narrative is driven by engaging first-person accounts that illuminate, and reveal the stories behind, the changing dynamics of the US population.
The 16th Edition provides an up-to-date exploration of intergroup relations in the US and abroad. New content includes expanded analysis of intersectionality, updated coverage of US refugee policy and the latest on language use among the Indigenous people of Canada.
Hallmark features of this title
- Speaking Out features provide firsthand commentaries on race and ethnicity in America, helping students to appreciate racial and ethnic groups' responses to prejudice and other challenges. These include excerpts written or spoken by prominent figures such as W. E. B. DuBois, Mary Pattillo and Tomás R. Jiménez.
- Relations Across Boundaries features describe the interactions between racial, ethnic and religious groups. They help readers understand that social relationships in the US are not necessarily dominated by White Americans.
- Research Focus and Global View boxes offer new insights into the ever-changing nature of race and ethnicity.
- The Spectrum of Intergroup Relations addresses the unique social circumstances of individual racial and ethnic groups.
New and updated features of this title
- NEW: The 16th Edition includes coverage of recent important events. These include the consequences of the coronavirus epidemic, the Black Lives Matter protests of 2020, and changes to immigration and refugee policy between the administrations of Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Highlights of additional new and updated topics include:
- The most recent news on efforts of American Indians voting in national elections on reservations in Chapter 6
- A discussion of how Chinese Americans were stigmatized during the COVID-19 pandemic in Chapter 12
- Coverage of the October 2018 attack on the Pittsburgh Tree of Life Synagogue in Chapter 14
- UPDATED: Key terms are highlighted when introduced, collected at the end of each chapter, and listed in a chapter-ending glossary. New terms highlighted in the 16th Edition include critical race theory, relational assimilation and double consciousness.
- UPDATED: The 16th Edition reflects the most recent data releases from the US Census Bureau. 40% of the 1,700 references are new to this edition.
Features of Revel for the 16th Edition
- Trending features discuss relevant contemporary topics such as Native Americans in college and the growth of Islam in the US.
- Data-rich interactive maps, figures, and tables with Social Explorer technology let students interact with real data to explore key concepts.
- Current Event Bulletins bring currency into your classroom with author-written articles that connect key concepts with real-life current events.
- The Pearson Originals docuseries is a series of high-quality social impact videos that exemplify and humanize key sociological concepts. These videos help students connect with stories on a personal level, view people with greater empathy and contextualize core concepts.
Part 1: Perspectives on Racial and Ethnic Groups
- Exploring Race and Ethnicity
- Prejudice and Racism
- Discrimination
Part 2: Ethnic and Religious Sources of Conflict
- Immigration
- Ethnicity, Whiteness and Religion
Part 3: Major Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups in the United States
- Native Americans: The First Americans
- African Americans
- African Americans Today
- Latinos: Growth and Diversity
- Mexican Americans and Puerto Ricans
- Muslim and Arab Americans: Diverse Cultures
- Asian Pacific Americans: An Array of Nationalities
- Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans
- Jewish Americans: The Quest to Maintain Identity
Part 4: Other Patterns of Dominance
- Women: The Oppressed Majority
- Beyond the United States: The Comparative Perspective
- Overcoming Exclusion
About our authors
Richard T. Schaefer grew up in Chicago at a time when neighborhoods were going through transitions in ethnic and racial composition. He found himself increasingly intrigued by what was happening, how people were reacting and how these changes were affecting neighborhoods and people’s jobs. In high school, he took a course in sociology. His interest in social issues caused him to gravitate to more sociology courses at Northwestern University, where he eventually received a BA in sociology.
“Originally as an undergraduate I thought I would go on to law school and become a lawyer. But after taking a few sociology courses, I found myself wanting to learn more about what sociologists studied and was fascinated by the kinds of questions they raised,” Dr. Schaefer says. “Perhaps most fascinating and, to me, relevant to the 1960s was the intersection of race, gender and social class.” This interest led him to obtain his MA and PhD in sociology from the University of Chicago. Dr. Schaefer’s continuing interest in race relations led him to write his master’s thesis on the membership of the Ku Klux Klan and his doctoral thesis on racial prejudice and race relations in Great Britain.
Dr. Schaefer went on to become a professor of sociology. He has taught sociology and courses on multiculturalism for 40 years. He has been invited to give special presentations on racial and ethnic diversity to students and faculty in Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas.
Dr. Schaefer is the author of Race and Ethnicity in the United States, 9th Edition (Pearson, 2019). He is the general editor of the 3-volume Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Society (2008). He is also the author of the 15th Edition of Sociology: A Brief Introduction (2025), the 6th Edition of Sociology: A Modular Approach (2023), and the 8th Edition of Sociology Matters (2024). He coauthored with William Zellner the 9th Edition of Extraordinary Groups (2015). Schaefer’s books have been translated into Chinese (long and short forms), Sinhalese, Indonesian, Turkish, Japanese, Sinhalese, Portuguese, and Spanish, as well as adapted for use in Canadian colleges. His articles and book reviews have appeared in many journals, including American Journal of Sociology, Phylon: A Review of Race and Culture, Contemporary Sociology, Sociology and Social Research, Sociological Quarterly and Teaching Sociology. He served as president of the Midwest Sociological Society from 1994 to 1995.
Need help? Get in touch