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The People's Republic of China recognizes
56 people, or ethnic groups, in China. Fifty-five of these are considered
minority groups; the last is comprised of the Han people who make up the
majority of China's population. The minority groups form about seven per
cent of China's population while the Han comprise the remaining 93%. However,
upon examination, it becomes apparent that the 55 minority nationalities
are actually umbrella groups that gather together hundreds of different
people groups. Under each of these umbrella groups there are groups with
significant cultural differences as well as groups with various dialects
and sub-dialects-some mutually unintelligible.
The identification of the 55 recognized minority
groups dates back to the early 1950s when the Chinese government invited
leaders from these groups to register their group with the government
to be considered for official recognition. The results were overwhelming
with the names of over 400 groups submitted. Over the next 20 years, the
government carried out further research and, by combining groups into
broad ethnic classifications, in 1976 had reduced the number to 51. Since
then, four more groups have been added. These artificially constructed
categories have often created tension between ethnic groups who have been
classified together but see themselves as very different peoples.
It is difficult to know how many people
groups actually exist in China. An ethnologue lists 205 ethno-linguistic
groups in China. Paul Hattaway, a researcher of people groups of China,
in his recently published Operation China, provides profiles on
490 minority peoples.
While most people see the large Han majority
as a homogeneous group, this is a false assumption. The peoples of China
speak a multitude of diverse languages and dialects and the Han people
can also be broken down into subgroups. At present, 29 ethno-linguistic
subgroups among the Han have been identified. However, another way of
looking at the Han people is to use sociological groupings. When the goal
is to discover the natural people groupings within which values and ideologies
spread without encountering barriers of understanding or acceptance, both
ethno-linguistic and sociological groupings are valid. Sociologically,
people groups may be identified by generational differences, educational
levels, occupations, socio-economic status and a variety of other defining
criteria. The crucial issue is how they see themselves. Most people will
be part of several different sociologically-defined groups.
The more than 100 million people that form
the minority groups occupy 62.5% of China's territory with the remainder
of the land being occupied by the 1.2 billion Han people. Traditionally,
the minority groups lived in rural areas, often in western and southwestern
parts of the country with the Han found on the coast and in the eastern
areas. Today, with rapid urbanization and movement between rural areas
and the cities, the lines are not quite so clear-cut. In 1997, The State
Ethnic Affairs Commission estimated that 20% of the total minority population
was living in the cities. For example, 3.8% of Beijing's population is
comprised of minority peoples from all 55 of the officially recognized
nationalities.
To learn more about a people group, follow
the links below.
People Group
Resources
People Group Profiles
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