Demographics of California

California is the most populated U.S. state, with an estimated population of 39.512 million as of July 1, 2019.[1] It has people from a wide variety of ethnic, racial, national, and religious backgrounds.

Population

Historical population
CensusPop.
185092,597
1860379,994310.4%
1870560,24747.4%
1880864,69454.3%
18901,213,39840.3%
19001,485,05322.4%
19102,377,54960.1%
19203,426,86144.1%
19305,677,25165.7%
19406,907,38721.7%
195010,586,22353.3%
196015,717,20448.5%
197019,953,13427.0%
198023,667,90218.6%
199029,760,02125.7%
200033,871,64813.8%
201037,253,95610.0%
Est. 201939,512,2236.1%
Sources: 1910–2010[2][3]

California is the most populated sub-national entity in North America. If it were an independent country, California would rank 34th in population in the world. It has a larger population than either Canada or Australia.[4] Its population is one third larger than that of the next most populous state, Texas.[5] California surpassed New York to become the most populous state in 1962.[6] California's population growth has slowed dramatically in the 21st century.[7][8] In 2010, the state's five most populous counties were Los Angeles County, San Diego County, Orange County, Riverside County, and San Bernardino County, with Riverside County having the largest percentage increase in population.[9] The largest metro areas in California, as of 2010, are Los Angeles, San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose, San Diego, Riverside-San Bernardino, and Sacramento.[10] From 2006 until 2016, the state lost a net population of about 1 million people from emigration to other states[11] (the plurality of whom moved to Texas), yet the population of the state continued to grow due to immigration from overseas and more births than deaths.[12]

As of 2006, California had an estimated population of 37,172,015, more than 12 percent of the U.S. population. This includes a natural increase since the last census of 1,557,112 people (i.e., 2,781,539 births minus 1,224,427 deaths) and an increase due to net migration of 751,419 people. Immigration resulted in a net increase of 1,415,879 people, and migration from within the U.S. resulted in a net decrease of 564,100 people. California is the 13th fastest-growing state. As of 2008, the total fertility rate was 2.15.[13]

Population density

The center of population of California is located at 35.463595°N 119.325359°W / 35.463595; -119.325359 in Kern County, near the town of Shafter.[14]

No single ethnic group forms a majority of California's population, making the state a minority-majority state. Hispanics (of any race) are the largest single ethnic group in the state.[15] Spanish is the state's second most widely spoken language. Areas with especially large Spanish speaking populations include the Los Angeles metropolitan area, the California-Mexico border counties of San Diego and Imperial, and the San Joaquin Valley. Nearly 43% of Californian residents speak a language other than English at home, a proportion far higher than any other state.[16]

In 2011, there were an estimated 2.6 million illegal immigrants residing in California.[17] California is home to almost 25% of the country's undocumented population, making up 6% of California's residents overall. Two-thirds of California's undocumented population have lived in the state for more than 10 years.[18]

About 52% of California's public school students in the 2011–12 school year identified themselves as Hispanic or Latino and 26% as non-Hispanic Caucasian. The following ethnic groups made up the rest of the statewide public school student body: Asians (11%), African Americans (7%), Native Americans (0.7%), and Pacific Islanders (0.6%). Students of mixed race made up about 2% of the public schools. Hispanics have made up the majority of the state's public schools since 2010. Los Angeles Unified School District, the largest school district in California and second largest in the nation, is 73% Hispanic, 10% African American, 9% non-Hispanic Caucasian, 6% Asian, 0.5% Native American, and 0.4% Pacific Islander.[19]

Net domestic migration

Year[20] In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2010 444,749 573,988 –129,239
2011 468,428 562,343 –93,915
2012 493,641 566,986 –73,345
2013 485,477 581,679 –96,202
2014 513,968 593,308 –79,340
2015 514,477 643,710 –129,233
2016 514,758 657,690 –142,932
2017 523,131 661,026 –137,895
2018 501,023 691,145 –190,122

Racial/Ethnic makeup

Racial and Ethnic Makeup of California excluding Hispanics from racial categories (2018)[21] NH=Non-Hispanic

According to 2018 US Census Bureau estimates, California's population was 59.5% White (36.6% Non-Hispanic White), 14.7% Asian, 13.8% Some Other Race, 5.8% Black or African American, 0.8% Native American and Alaskan Native, 0.4% Pacific Islander and 5.1% from two or more races.[21] The White population continues to remain the largest racial category as Hispanics primarily identify as White (58.2%) with others identifying as Some Other Race (34.4%), Multiracial (5.1%), Black (0.7%), American Indian and Alaskan Native (1.1%), Asian (0.5%), and Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (0.1%).[21] By ethnicity, 39.3% of the total population is Hispanic-Latino (of any race) and 60.7% is Non-Hispanic (of any race). If excluded from racial categories, Hispanics are the largest racial/ethnic group in California.[21]

In 2015, California had the largest ethnic/racial minority population in the United States. Non-Hispanic whites decreased from about 76.3 - 78% of the state's population in 1970[22] to 36.6%% in 2018.[21] While the population of minorities accounts for 100.7 million of 300 million U.S. residents, 20% of the national total live in California (2008).[23][24]

California has the highest number, and second highest percentage, of Asian Americans by state. Only Hawaii has a higher Asian American percentage than California. While New Mexico and Texas have higher percentages of Hispanics, California has the highest total number of Hispanics of any U.S. state. Hispanics are the largest single ethnic group in the state.[25]

The largest named ancestries in California are Mexican (25%), German (9%), Irish (7.7%), English (7.4%) and Italian[26](5.8%); there are 65 other ethnicities with sizable populations in California including Arabs, Albanians, Australians, Canadians, Haitians, Iranians/Persians and Somalis as examples. Both Los Angeles and San Francisco have large numbers of residents with English, French, Italian, Iranian/Persian[27], German, Russian and Scandinavian ancestry.

California has the largest population of White Americans in the U.S., totaling 21,453,934 residents as of the 2010 census. The state has the fifth largest population of African Americans in the U.S., an estimated 2,299,072 residents. California's Asian population is estimated at 4.9 million, approximately one-third of the nation's estimated 15 million Asian Americans. California's Native American population of 285,512 is the third-largest of any state, behind Arizona and Oklahoma.[28]

Demographics of California (csv)
By race White Black AIAN* Asian NHPI*
2000 (total population) 79.75% 7.65% 1.99% 12.39% 0.69%
2000 (Hispanic only) 30.79% 0.61% 0.85% 0.45% 0.13%
2005 (total population) 79.07% 7.45% 1.93% 13.47% 0.71%
2005 (Hispanic only) 33.59% 0.67% 0.84% 0.47% 0.13%
Growth 2000–05 (total population) 5.76% 3.90% 3.58% 16.01% 10.13%
Growth 2000–05 (non-Hispanic only) -0.91% 2.80% 1.87% 16.18% 9.65%
Growth 2000–05 (Hispanic only) 16.36% 16.48% 5.87% 11.68% 12.29%
* AIAN is American Indian or Alaskan Native; NHPI is Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander

Since the 2000 U.S. Census, California has been known as the second state in US history (after Hawaii since its statehood in 1959) to have a non-white majority, and since 2014, the first state to have a Latino plurality surpass other racial/ethnic groups. The media discussed the possibility of Latinos becoming a majority in the 21st century,[29] for the first time since statehood (1850) when massive immigration of Anglo-Americans during the California Gold Rush of 1848-49 reduced Spanish speakers to 20 percent of the population.

European Americans

Pedestrians walking on the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica.

California has the largest population of European Americans of any state. For example, in 2000 California had more Bulgarian Americans, Romanian Americans and Hungarian Americans than any other U.S. state. Los Angeles and San Francisco have large Russian American and Ukrainian American populations; and a long history of German, Irish, Italian, English and Polish communities established by immigrants in the late 19th century. There are also many English Americans, Irish Americans, and French Americans whose ancestors were the original 49ers, also known as the California Gold Rush immigrants.

California has over one million residents each with Spanish or Portuguese ancestry , with communities along coastal parts of the state such as San Diego, Long Beach, Camarillo, Santa Clara Valley (including Cupertino, Gilroy and San Jose), Salinas Valley, Santa Maria Valley, and San Joaquin Valley. A small wave of Danish, Dutch and Swedish immigrants founded towns like Lathrop near Stockton, Artesia near Los Angeles, Kingsburg south of Fresno, Solvang north of Santa Barbara in the late 1800s and the private community of Sveadal located 15 miles south of San Jose and populated entirely by members of the Swedish American Patriotic League.[30] Small colonies of early 19th century Russian settlement under the Russian American Company are in Fort Ross,[31] Calistoga and the Russian River Valley in Sonoma and Napa counties. California also has the third largest Greek American population in the United States, behind New York and Massachusetts. Small Amish/Mennonite colonies exist in an area bordered by the towns Oakdale, Riverbank and Ripon near Modesto and in Reedley, Sanger and Orange Cove near Fresno in the San Joaquin Valley; and in the outer Salinas Valley.[32]

The most important Italian community in California is in North Beach District at San Francisco. The 60% of californian Italo-Americans are from northern Italy. Others numerous groups are from Tuscany and Sicily.[33] Many Italians also live in San Diego, with Little Italy having San Diego’s largest Italian population.

Hispanic/Latino Americans

Latinos, mainly Mexican Americans, form major portions of the population of Southern California, especially in Los Angeles, as well as the San Joaquin Valley. The city of Los Angeles is often said to be the largest Mexican community in the United States. Census records kept track of the growth since 1850, but Mexicans and Mexican-Americans have lived in California since Spanish Colonial times. However, the number and percentage population of Latinos living in California increased rapidly in the late 20th century. The result is that, today, Latinos are the largest ethnic group in Los Angeles County, at just under half of the county's population. Latinos are predominantly concentrated in the older eastern and southern suburbs surrounding downtown Los Angeles and northern Long Beach, the southern/eastern San Fernando Valley, and the San Gabriel/Pomona Valleys. They also comprise sizable communities in Arvin, Bakersfield, Delano, El Monte, Fontana, Fresno, Indio, La Puente, Ontario, Oxnard, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Diego, San José, Santa Barbara, Santa Maria, Stockton, Vallejo, Watsonville and Yuba City. In Santa Ana in Orange County, Latinos comprise 75 percent of the population. Nearby Anaheim is over half Latino, and Orange County's population is 30-35 percent Latino.

The Imperial Valley on the U.S.-Mexican border is about 70–75% Latino; communities with many Latinos can also be found in Riverside County, especially at its eastern end, and the Coachella Valley. The Central Valley has many Mexican American migrant farm workers. Latinos are the majority in 14 counties: Colusa, Fresno, Glenn, Imperial, Kern, Kings, Madera, Merced, Monterey, Napa, San Benito, Santa Cruz, Tulare and Yolo counties.

Latinos make up at least 20% of the San Francisco Bay Area. Many live in San Mateo, Alameda, Contra Costa and Santa Clara counties, as well in San Francisco. The Napa Valley and Salinas Valley have predominantly Latino communities established by migrant farm workers. San Jose is about 30-35 percent Latino, the largest Latino community in northern California, while the Mission District, San Francisco and Lower/West Oakland have barrios established by Mexican and Latin American immigrants. The Mexican American communities of East Los Angeles and Logan Heights, San Diego, as well the San Joaquin Valley are centers of historic Chicano and Latino cultures.

California also has the largest populations of Hispanics/Latinos in the country. Most of the state's Latinos have Mexican ancestry, having the largest Mexican population in the United States, making up about 31 percent of the state population. California has a large and diverse population, having the largest Central American, especially Salvadorans population in the United States. Guatemalan Americans are spread out in Southern California after previously being centered in Los Angeles between 1970 and 2010. California also has many Cuban Americans, Puerto Rican Americans, Honduran Americans, and Nicaraguan Americans, along with people of Chilean, Colombian, Peruvian, and other South American ancestry. Los Angeles has had the United States' largest Central American community, as well as the largest Mexican American community, since the 1910s. In fact, the 1900 census record finds 319 to 619 out of 100,000 residents in the city of Los Angeles were "Spanish" or "Mexican". (see Demographics of Los Angeles). Nearly 31 percent of Los Angeles itself is of Mexican descent, having the largest Mexican population of any city in the United States. 12,392 Belizeans also live in California.[34]

In Mariposa County, there is a very small community of Californios or Spanish American people as they identify themselves, that dates back before the U.S. annexation of California. Hornitos is home to an estimated 1,000 people and many are "Californios". The community's "Spanish" Californio culture is closely linked with Mexico and other Latin American nations.

Middle Eastern/North African Americans

The state also has over 715,000 Arab Americans, with large communities in Alameda, Fresno, Imperial, Kern, Los Angeles (most in the state), Orange, San Bernardino, San Diego, Sacramento and Stanislaus counties. They represent all Arab nationalities, the most numerous being of Gaza and West Bank (see Palestinian Americans) followed by those from Syria (see Syrian Americans) and Lebanon (about half- 1.5 out of 3.1 million estimated- (see Lebanese Americans) live in California), Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates and Yemen. Arabs have resided in California since the 1920s, most notably in Orange County in the section of Little Arabia (Anaheim, California) and the San Diego area.

About 500,000 Iranian or Persian Americans live throughout Southern California, including about 20% of the population of Beverly Hills.[35] Iranian American communities also flourish in the San Fernando Valley, Orange County, San Diego and the San Joaquin Valley. The majority of Iranian Americans immigrated after the ouster of the fall of Persian monarchy in the late 1970s.

There is also large population of Assyrian/Chaldean descent living in the Central Valley, with large communities in Modesto, Ceres and Turlock, as well as throughout the Central Coast and the California Desert (i.e. the Coachella and Imperial valleys). San Diego has one of the largest concentrations of Chaldean immigrants in the United States.[36]

About 20,000 Israeli Americans live in California, while most live in Southern California in the Los Angeles and San Diego area, they also live predominately in the San Francisco area of Northern California. And the Druze of Lebanon form moderately-sized communities in both Los Angeles and San Francisco.

California is also home to 600,000 Armenian Americans, with many in Glendale north of Los Angeles, as well as a large community in Fresno. As of 1988 California had about 500,000 ethnic Armenians with over half of them living in Greater Los Angeles.[37]

Turkish Americans and Azerbaijani Americans form moderately-sized communities in both Los Angeles and San Francisco. The state also has over 2,000 Circassian Americans with a little community in Anaheim.

Over 50,000 Afghan Americans are concentrated in the East Bay primarily in Alameda County and its communities of Fremont and Hayward; Afghans also live throughout the state (esp. Orange County and Ventura County).

African Americans

California has 2.3 million African Americans as of 2010, the largest population of Black or African Americans of the western U.S states,[38] and the 5th largest Black population in the United States. Cities that have the largest share of African Americans and have historically been Black cultural centers include (11 largest in the state): Compton, Inglewood, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Oakland, Richmond, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Diego and Vallejo.

There are many other cities and towns in the state with sizeable African American populations. These include:

Northern: Berkeley, Dublin, East Palo Alto, Emeryville, Fairfield, Hayward, Marin City, San Leandro, and Suisun City.

Central: Bakersfield, Fresno, Kings-Tulare counties, Merced, Modesto, and Stockton.

Southern: Adelanto, Altadena, Apple Valley, California City, Carson, Corona, Desert Hot Springs, Fontana, Gardena, Hawthorne, Lakewood, Lancaster, Lynwood, Moreno Valley, National City, Oceanside, Palmdale, Palm Springs, Pasadena, Perris, Pomona, Rialto, Twentynine Palms, and Victorville.

African Americans are approximately 7 percent of the state population. The state percentage of African Americans has dropped in the 1990s and 2000s, though the state's overall number of African-Americans has increased in that time period. The black population in East and West Oakland and South Central Los Angeles - places where they held the majority for decades - has greatly decreased as the black middle class has relocated to nearby suburbs, including those in the Inland Empire and Antelope Valley in Southern California and the Sacramento metropolitan area in Northern California. Many African Americans have also moved to the South, where their grandparents may have come from in the "Great Migration" of the mid-20th century.

African Americans have made a contribution to the state's hip-hop and R&B music culture. African-American musical artists born and/or raised in California include: Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, E-40, Nate Dogg, En Vogue, Tony! Toni! Tone!, Too Short, Eazy-E, N.W.A, Keyshia Cole, Digital Underground, JJ Fad, Barry White, The Pointer Sisters and Kendrick Lamar.

Also noted is California has small West Indian (Afro-Caribbean American) and African immigration from countries such as Cape Verde, Eritrea, Ethiopia (i.e. Little Ethiopia in West Los Angeles), Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, Somalia, South Africa (including White South Africans), Tanzania and Yemen across from the Horn of Africa. They established communities in Los Angeles known for a large Ethiopian community and Oakland/Berkeley (East Bay) as well Nuer refugees from South Sudan migrated to the Sacramento area; and the Cape Verdean community in Solano County and the Santa Clara Valley, and the San Diego area. 14,728 are Jamaican.[39][40] 2,827 Trinidadian and Tobagonians live in California.[41]

Native Americans

As of 2010, California's Native American population of 362,801 was the most of any state.[42] It also has the most Native American tribes, indigenous to the state or not, but the majority of known Californian Indian tribes became extinct in the late 19th century. The U.S. Census includes Latin American Indian, especially immigrants who belonged to indigenous peoples or who have Amerindian heritage from North and South America.

The Cherokee Nation is the largest tribe in the state with a population of 110,000, although the number of Cherokee descendants may surpass 600,000 according to demographers. They are often descendants of Dust Bowl refugees in the 1930s and 1940s who migrated to the state's farming counties and urban areas for jobs. The largest urban American Indian communities are Los Angeles/Long Beach, San Francisco/Oakland, Sacramento, and San Diego areas.

California also has significant populations of the Apache, Choctaw, Muscogee, Hopi, Zuni, Navajo, Blackfeet, Shoshone, Paiute, Pueblo, Cahuilla, Chumash, and Yokut tribes. The Cahuilla in the Coachella Valley have profited from real estate land leases, and much of Indio and Palm Springs are tribal-owned lands under legal tribal jurisdiction.[43]

Asian Americans

The state has a long history of established East, South, and Southeast Asian American communities, including Chinese since the 1850s, Japanese since the 1880s, Indians since the 1890s and Filipinos for over a century since 1900. A large wave of Asian immigration since 1965 brought in more Chinese along with Koreans and Southeast Asians after the Vietnam war ended in the late 1970s. South Asians are also a fast-growing group.

As of the 2010 Census there were a total of 17,941,286 respondents who claimed to be Asian American and Asian.[44] Out of these respondents in the United States,[45] 30.9% live in California, with 5,556,592 Asian Americans being counted by the 2010 Census.[46] This is a 1.5 million growth in population from the 2000 census, making Asian Americans 14.9 percent of the state's population.[47] Out of those almost 5.6 million Asian Americans in California there are 1,474,707 Filipinos, 1,349,111 Chinese, 647,589 Vietnamese, 590,445 Indians, 505,225 Koreans, 428,140 Japanese, 109,928 Taiwanese, 102,317 Cambodians, 91,224 Hmong, 69,303 Laotians, 67,707 Thais, 53,474 Pakistanis, 39,506 Borneans, Sumatrans, and Indonesians, 17,978 Burmese, 11,929 Sri Lankans, 10,494 Bangladeshis, 6,231 Nepalese, 5,595 Malaysians, 4,993 Mongolians, 1,513 Singaporeans, 1,377 Ryukyuans, and 750 Bhutanese.[46]

Filipino Americans are particularly numerous in Los Angeles, Sacramento, San Francisco, San Diego, San Mateo and Solano counties, and in southern California communities such as Artesia, Baldwin Park, Carson, Cerritos, Covina, West Covina, and the Eagle Rock district of Los Angeles. Around San Diego, many Filipinos live in the communities of Mira Mesa, National City, and Chula Vista. Delano near Bakersfield, other towns in the San Joaquin Valley, the Inland Empire of Riverside-San Bernardino, Coachella Valley-Imperial Valley region [48], Salinas, Stockton and Lathrop, and the Santa Maria/San Luis Obispo area also have large Filipino American populations. Daly City south of San Francisco has a large Filipino population and is the largest percentage wise in the United States. As of the 1980s, Filipinos have been the largest population of Asians in California.[49] Twenty percent of registered nurses, in 2013, in California are Filipino.[50]

Chinese Americans are numerous in San Francisco, Oakland, the East Bay, South Bay, the Central Coast of California, Sacramento, San Diego, and the San Gabriel Valley region of Los Angeles County. The San Francisco Bay Area has a greater concentration of Cantonese-speaking Chinese than any other region in the United States. The Mexican border community of Calexico, California in addition to Mexicali has large numbers of Chinese Mexican Americans, that is, Mexican Americans of Chinese ancestry. Smaller Chinese communities can also be found in San Jacinto Valley, Lake Elsinore, and Victorville.

Southern California has perhaps the largest Taiwan-born Chinese American community in the U.S., particularly in the San Gabriel Valley (i.e. Walnut and Diamond Bar), Buena Park, Cerritos, West Covina, Irvine, communities in the South Bay, Los Angeles and southern Orange County. Many minority groups from China also live in California, for example, there are Tibetan and Mongolian Americans concentrated in San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose, Orange County, and the Los Angeles/Long Beach area.

Large Korean American communities exist in the Koreatown area of Los Angeles, the eastern San Gabriel Valley, the San Fernando Valley, Cerritos/Long Beach, South Bay, Los Angeles, northern Orange County and San Diego area. There is another large Korean American population in the San Francisco Bay Area, and Koreans are growing in number in the suburban Inland Empire region, in cities such as Chino Hills, Corona, Desert Hot Springs and Loma Linda south of San Bernardino. Since 1990, the Korean American and African American populations relocated westward and northward in the Los Angeles area.

The South Bay area and Little Tokyo have a large Japanese American community. Japanese Americans, however, are also concentrated in San Francisco and across the Bay Area, San Jose, the Salinas Valley and Santa Cruz County; and smaller communities in the Sacramento, Fresno, Bakersfield, Anaheim, San Diego, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara and Stockton areas. Despite the presence of Japanese goods stores, media outlets and restaurants in the state, most "Little Tokyos" and "Japantowns" were evacuated during the forced relocation of Japanese Americans during World War II (see Japanese American Internment). As a result, most Japanese Americans in urban areas do not reside in historical Japanese communities.

California has the largest American population of Southeast Asians, concentrated in the Los Angeles-Long Beach, Sacramento, and Fresno areas. This includes the Hmong and Vietnamese, including Chinese Vietnamese. Long Beach has one of the largest Cambodian American communities in the United States. The neighboring cities of Westminster and Garden Grove have the largest Vietnamese American community outside of Vietnam and are often dubbed "Little Saigon". Vietnamese and Cambodian immigrants also settled in the San Francisco Bay Area, especially San Jose, Santa Clara and Sunnyvale, as well across the San Joaquin Valley and in San Diego.

Over 6,000 Laotian Americans live in the Fresno area, including an even larger Hmong American community, the second-largest of its kind. Other Hmong colonies in the Central Valley of California and Northern California developed since the end of the Vietnam war (1975–79).

California also has a Thai American community of over 250,000, concentrated in Southern California, with small Thai and Southeast Asian communities in Perris and Banning in the Inland Empire region. Los Angeles has the largest Thai population outside of Thailand and is also home to the world's first Thai Town. About 150,000 Indonesians live in Southern California, primarily the Los Angeles and San Diego areas.

California has the largest Indian American population in the U.S. Many live in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area, San Diego, and the San Francisco Bay Area. The Los Angeles suburbs of Artesia and Cerritos have large Indian American communities. San Jose, Fremont, and other Silicon Valley cities have many Indian Americans who are employed in the high-tech industry. Many Indian Americans are in Central Valley cities such as Stockton, Bakersfield, Fresno, Yuba City, and the Imperial Valley. Most South Asians in California are Indian American, but there are also Pakistani Americans, Bangladeshi Americans, and Sri Lankan Americans (see Sinhalese and Tamils) esp. concentrated in the San Gabriel Valley (Covina Valley) of the Los Angeles area.

200,000 Romani Americans live in California.[51]

Pacific Islander Americans

The state has 150,000 residents with Pacific Islander ancestry. Most, 80,000, are Native Hawaiians of measurable Polynesian ancestry; many also have Asian, European, or other ancestries. There are also 25,000 Samoan Americans originally from American Samoa or Western Samoa. Most live in Long Beach and the Los Angeles suburbs of Carson, Artesia, Cerritos, and Redondo Beach, Oceanside, and Upland. About 10,000 Chamorros from Guam and Northern Mariana Islands live in northern California, the largest Micronesian community in the mainland United States. An estimated 10,000 Tahitians from French Polynesia live in southern California.

There are also many Palauan Americans in southern California, specifically in the San Diego area, including Vista. Only 677 in Vista alone in the 2010 US Census. Members of the Palauan community often also have Malay, Indonesian, Micronesian, Melanesian, Japanese, and other east Asian ancestries. Many Chuukese or Trukese live in San Diego, while the original settlers on Truk Island are Spanish and German but most Truukese now are Japanese and Korean, then Filipino and some Chinese, and finally the arrival of American expatriates. Many came to the Oceanside area due to the military installations around the city, which has the oldest Polynesian or Pacific Islander community.

Ancestries of Californians

Population of California according to racial/ethnic group 1960–2010[54][55]
Racial/ethnic
group
Census 1960 Census 1970 Census 1980 Census 1990 Census 2000 Census 2010
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Non-Hispanic Whites 14,455,230 92.0 17,761,032 89.0 15,763,992 66.6 17,029,126 57.2 15,816,790 46.7 14,938,836 40.1
Hispanics (of any race) 4,541,300 19.2 7,687,938 25.8 10,966,556 32.4 14,007,487 37.6
non-Hispanic Blacks 883,861 5.6 1,400,143 7.0 1,819,281 7.7 2,208,801 7.4 2,181,926 6.4 2,309,745 6.2
Asians 318,376 2.0 552,364 2.8 1,819,281 5.3 2,845,659 9.6 3,697,513 10.9 4,843,014 13.0
American Indians and Alaska Natives 39,014 0.2 91,018 0.5 201,369 0.9 242,164 0.8 333,346 1.0 372,539 1.0

Birth data

Vital Statistics from 1909-2019[56][57]
Average population Crude birth rate

(per 1,000)

Crude death rate

(per 1,000)

Natural change

(per 1,000)

1909 2,282,000 13.6 13.6 0.0
1910 2,406,000 13.3 13.3 0.0
1911 2,534,000 13.8 13.4 0.4
1912 2,668,000 14.6 13.9 0.7
1913 2,811,000 15.7 13.9 1.8
1914 2,934,000 15.7 12.6 3.1
1915 3,008,000 16.0 13.0 3.0
1916 3,071,000 16.6 13.0 3.6
1917 3,171,000 16.4 13.2 3.2
1918 3,262,000 17.2 17.6 -0.6
1919 3,339,000 17.1 13.8 3.3
1920 3,554,000 18.9 13.2 5.7
1921 3,795,000 19.0 12.4 6.6
1922 3,991,000 18.3 13.0 5.3
1923 4,270,000 18.7 12.6 6.1
1924 4,541,000 19.2 12.6 6.6
1925 4,730,000 18.0 12.1 5.9
1926 4,929,000 16.6 12.0 4.9
1927 5,147,000 16.3 11.9 4.4
1928 5,344,000 15.7 12.4 3.3
1929 5,531,000 14.6 11.8 2.8
1930 5,711,000 14.7 11.6 3.1
1931 5,824,000 14.1 11.7 2.4
1932 5,894,000 13.2 11.5 1.7
1933 5,963,000 12.6 11.4 1.2
1934 6,060,000 12.9 11.2 1.7
1935 6,175,000 13.0 11.8 1.2
1936 6,341,000 13.2 12.0 1.2
1937 6,528,000 14.4 12.3 2.1
1938 6,656,000 15.3 11.4 3.9
1939 6,785,000 15.3 11.3 4.0
1940 6,950,000 16.1 11.5 4.6
1941 7,237,000 17.3 11.3 6.0
1942 7,735,000 19.8 11.0 8.8
1943 8,506,000 20.3 10.6 9.7
1945 9,344,000 19.5 9.8 9.7
1946 9,559,000 22.7 9.8 12.9
1947 9,832,000 24.8 9.7 15.1
1948 10,060,000 23.8 9.7 14.1
1949 10,340,000 23.7 9.7 14.0
1950 10,680,000 22.9 9.3 13.6
1951 11,130,000 23.4 9.3 14.1
1952 11,640,000 24.1 9.3 14.8
1953 12,250,000 24.5 9.1 15.4
1954 12,750,000 24.4 8.7 15.7
1955 13,130,000 24.1 8.8 15.3
1956 13,710,000 24.6 8.8 15.8
1957 14,260,000 24.8 8.7 16.1
1958 14,880,000 23.7 8.5 15.2
1959 15,470,000 23.5 8.4 15.1
1960 15,870,000 23.5 8.5 15.0
1961 16,500,000 23.2 8.3 14.9
1962 17,070,000 22.3 8.3 14.0
1963 17,670,000 21.7 8.4 13.3
1964 18,150,000 20.8 8.4 12.4
1965 18,580,000 19.2 8.3 10.9
1966 18,860,000 17.9 8.3 9.6
1967 19,180,000 17.6 8.2 9.4
1968 19,390,000 17.4 8.3 9.1
1969 19,710,000 17.8 8.4 9.4
1970 19,970,000 17.9 8.2 9.7
1971 20,350,000 17.3 8.3 9.0
1972 20,590,000 15.2 8.2 7.0
1973 20,870,000 14.5 8.3 6.2
1974 21,170,000 14.2 8.0 6.2
1975 21,540,000 14.7 7.9 6.8
1976 21,940,000 14.7 7.7 7.0
1977 22,350,000 15.3 7.5 7.8
1978 22,840,000 15.3 7.6 7.7
1979 23,260,000 15.8 7.6 8.2
1980 23,670,000 16.4 7.6 8.8
1981 24,290,000 17.0 7.8 9.2
1982 24,820,000 17.1 7.5 9.6
1983 25,360,000 17.2 7.4 9.8
1984 25,840,000 16.9 7.4 9.5
1985 26,440,000 17.3 7.7 9.6
1986 27,100,000 17.8 7.4 10.4
1987 27,780,000 17.8 7.4 10.4
1988 28,460,000 18.2 7.5 10.7
1989 29,220,000 18.8 7.4 11.4
1990 29,960,000 19.9 7.1 12.8
1991 30,470,000 20.0 7.0 13.0
1992 30,970,000 19.8 7.0 12.8
1993 31,270,000 18.8 6.9 11.9
1994 31,480,000 18.4 7.1 11.3
1995 31,700,000 17.6 7.0 10.6
1996 32,020,000 17.0 7.0 10.0
1997 35,830,000 16.4 6.8 9.6
1998 32,990,000 15.9 6.9 9.0
1999 33,500,000 15.5 6.8 8.7
2000 33,990,000 15.5 6.7 8.8
2001 34,480,000 15.3 6.7 8.6
2002 34,870,000 15.1 6.7 8.4
2003 35,250,000 15.2 6.6 8.6
2004 35,570,000 15.1 6.7 8.4
2005 35,830,000 15.2 6.4 8.8
2006 36,020,000 15.3 6.6 8.7
2007 36,250,000 15.4 6.4 9.0
2008 36,600,000 15.4 6.4 9.0
2009 36,960,000 14.5 6.1 8.4
2010 37,350,000 13.8 6.2 7.6
2011 37,670,000 13.5 6.3 7.2
2012 38,020,000 13.1 6.3 6.8
2013 38,350,000 13.0 6.5 6.5
2014 38,700,000 12.9 6.3 6.6
2015 39,030,000 12.8 6.5 6.3
2016 39,300,000 12.4 6.7 5.7
2017 39,540,000 11.9 6.8 5.1
2018 39,818,000 11.6 6.8 4.8
2019 39,959,000 11.3 6.8 4.5
Live Births by Single Race/Ethnicity of Mother
Ethnicity 2013[58] 2014[59] 2015[60] 2016[61] 2017[62] 2018[63]
Non-Hispanic White 143,531 (29.0%) 144,318 (28.7%) 141,592 (28.8%) 132,780 (27.2%) 127,822 (27.1%) 123,139 (27.1%)
Asian 76,424 (15.4%) 84,224 (16.7%) 80,269 (16.3%) 73,843 (15.1%) 72,049 (15.2%) 68,444 (15.0%)
African 31,977 (6.5%) 31,654 (6.3%) 30,546 (6.2%) 23,936 (4.9%) 23,441 (5.0%) 22,380 (4.9%)
Pacific Islander ... ... ... 1,851 (0.4%) 1,809 (0.4%) 1,732 (0.4%)
American Indian 3,590 (0.7%) 3,509 (0.7%) 3,510 (0.7%) 1,447 (0.3%) 1,411 (0.3%) 1,411 (0.3%)
Hispanic 238,496 (48.2%) 237,539 (47.2%) 234,237 (47.6%) 228,982 (46.8%) 220,122 (46.7%) 211,271 (46.4%)
Total California 494,705 (100%) 502,879 (100%) 491,748 (100%) 488,827 (100%) 471,658 (100%) 454,920 (100%)

Note: Births in table do not add up, because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number.

  • Persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.

Languages

Top 10 Non-English Languages Spoken in California (as of 2010)[64]
LanguagePercentage of population
Spanish28.46%
Chinese (including Cantonese and Mandarin)2.80%
Tagalog2.20%
Vietnamese1.43%
Korean1.08%
Armenian and Persian (tied)0.52% (each)
Japanese0.43%
Russian0.42%
Hindi and Arabic (tied)0.38% (each)
French0.36%

As of 2010, 20,379,282 of California residents age 5 and older spoke English at home as a primary language, while 10,672,610 spoke Spanish, 1,231,425 Chinese (which includes Cantonese and Mandarin), 796,451 Tagalog, 559,932 Vietnamese, 367,523 Korean, 192,980 Armenian, and Persian was spoken as a main language by 203,770 of the population over the age of five. In total, 14,644,136 of California's population age 5 and older spoke a mother language other than English.[64]

Comparatively, according to the 2007 American Community Survey, 42.6 percent of California's population older than five spoke a language other than English at home, with 73 percent of those also speaking English well or very well, while 9.8 did not speak English at all.[65]

California had the highest concentration of Vietnamese or Chinese speakers in the United States, second highest concentration of Korean or Spanish speakers in the United States, and third highest concentration of Tagalog speakers in the United States.[65] California was historically one of the most linguistically diverse areas in the world, and is home to more than 70 indigenous languages derived from 64 root languages in 6 language families.[66][67] A survey conducted between 2007 and 2009 identified 23 different indigenous languages of Mexico that are spoken among California farmworkers.[68]

Over 200 languages are known to be spoken and read in California, with Spanish used as the state's "alternative" language. California has more than 100 indigenous languages, making California one of the most linguistically diverse areas in the world. All of California's indigenous languages are endangered, although there are now efforts toward language revitalization.[note 1]

The official language of California has been English since the passage of Proposition 63 in 1986.[69] However, many state, city, and local government agencies still continue to print official public documents in numerous languages.[70] For example, the California Department of Motor Vehicles offers the written exam for the standard C Class driver's license in 31 languages along with English, and the audio exam in 11 languages.[71] The politics of language is a major political issue in the state, especially in regard to language policy controlling the teaching and official use of immigrant languages.

As a result of the state's increasing diversity and migration from other areas across the country and around the globe, linguists began noticing a noteworthy set of emerging characteristics of spoken English in California since the late 20th Century. This dialect, known as California English, has a vowel shift and several other phonological processes that are different from the dialects used in other regions of the country.[72]

Religion

Religion in California (2014)[73]

  Protestantism (32%)
  Roman Catholicism (28%)
  Mormonism (1%)
  Eastern Orthodoxy (1%)
  Other Christian (1%)
  No religion (27%)
  Judaism (2%)
  Islam (1%)
  Buddhism (2%)
  Hinduism (2%)
  Other religion (1%)
  Don't know (1%)

California has the most Roman Catholics in the United States, ahead of New York State, as well as large Protestant, non-religious, Jewish, and Muslim populations. It also has the largest Latter-day Saint population outside of Utah.[74] The state also has a large American Jewish community, the largest in the western U.S., mainly concentrated in Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, San Francisco, Oakland, Sacramento and Palm Springs. It also has large Muslim communities in west Los Angeles, San Diego, Beverly Hills, Orange County, Santa Clara County, and the Modesto area. Religions indigenous to California includes LaVeyan Satanism.[75] The Eckankar religion was founded in California.[76]

Most Roman Catholics in California are of Mexican, other Hispanic, Spanish, Irish, Italian and Filipino ancestry. The population of Catholic Californians is rapidly growing due to the influx of Latin American and Filipino immigrants. In the state, Roman Catholicism is highly represented among non-Hispanic European-Americans, but less represented among non-Hispanic African-Americans. Protestantism is the majority Christian denomination in non-Hispanic black and white groups.

The largest Christian denominations in California in 2000 were the Roman Catholic Church with 10,079,310; the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with 529,575; and the Southern Baptist Convention with 471,119. Jewish congregations had 994,000 adherents, or 3% of the Californian population.[77]

Hinduism, Buddhism, Shintō, Sikhism and Taoism were introduced in part by Asian immigrants. As the twentieth century came to a close, forty percent of all Buddhists in America resided in Southern California. The Los Angeles metropolitan area has become unique in the Buddhist world as the only place where representative organizations of every major school of Buddhism can be found in a single urban center.[78] The City of Ten Thousand Buddhas in Northern California and Hsi Lai Temple in Southern California are two of the largest Buddhist temples in the Western Hemisphere.

California has the highest Hindu population in the United States,[79] most of them Indian Americans.[80] Many of the prominent Hindu temples including the Malibu Hindu Temple are located in California.

With almost one million Jews, California has the highest number of Jews of any state except Florida and New York. Many Jews live in the West Los Angeles and (esp. west) San Fernando Valley regions of Los Angeles. [81] At the present time, one of California's Senators, Dianne Feinstein, is Jewish. Historic synagogues include Beth Jacob Congregation (Beverly Hills, California), Congregation B'nai Israel (Sacramento, California), and Temple Israel (Stockton, California). Chabad,[82] The Rohr Jewish Learning Institute,[83] and Aish HaTorah are active in California.

California also has the largest Muslim community in the United States, an estimated one percent of the population, mostly residing in Southern California. Approximately 100,000 Muslims reside in San Diego.

California has more members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Temples than any state except Utah.[84] Latter-day Saints (Mormons) have played important roles in the settlement of California throughout the state's history. For example, a group of a few hundred Latter-day Saint converts from the Northeastern United States and Europe arrived at what would become San Francisco in the 1840s aboard the ship Brooklyn, more than doubling the population of the small town. A group of Latter-day Saints also established the city of San Bernardino in Southern California in 1851.[74] According to the LDS Church 2014 statistics, 780,200 Latter-day Saints reside in the state of California, attending almost 1400 congregations statewide.[74]

The Seventh-day Adventist Church is headquartered in Loma Linda in San Bernardino county 60 miles east of Los Angeles, where the church members form the majority of the town's population. The SDA church there has a university, a free hospital and a TV station (3ABN or the 3 Angels Broadcasting Network). The town is known for a large number of centenarians.[85]

A Pew Research Center survey revealed, however, that California is less religious than the rest of the United States: 62% of Californians say they are "absolutely certain" of the belief "in God or a universal spirit", while in the nation 71% say so. The survey also revealed that 48% of Californians say religion is "very important", while the figure for the U.S. in general is 56%.[86]

According to Pew Forum there are less than 1% Wiccans and other pagans in state with Central Valley Wicca and Reclaiming Wicca as key.[87]

Income and socioeconomic factors

California's income distribution is quite broad compared to the country's as a whole; its proportions of residents with no income and of residents with income over $100,000 are both higher than the national average. This broad distribution combined with high housing and living costs give California an abnormally high poverty rate. The Census Bureau’s Supplemental Poverty Measure, calculated by comparing household income to a locally-adjusted poverty threshold, reports that 20.7% of California's population has income insufficient for their basic needs, as compared to 12.9% for the U.S. as a whole.[88] This calculation of income includes the benefits of California welfare programs such as food stamps and earned income tax credits — without these, the state's poverty rate would be 28%.[89]

A comparison of the distributions of California (left) and U.S. (right) households by their income relative to their estimated cost of living, showing the higher rates of poverty and near-poverty in California. Uses 2017 CPS data[88] about incomes in 2016. Comparison is of NAS Family Income minus Medical Out-of-Pocket to CE-Based Poverty Threshold with CPI-U and Geographical Price Adjustments, as per .

The trends of low income in California are complex; from 1975 to 2014, real (inflation-adjusted) incomes have alternated between rises and sharp declines. These incomes have decreased overall for those outside the top 20th percentile, with the bottom 20th percentile seeing an average decline of 1% per year during that period.[90][91] Correspondingly, the percent of Californians with income below their poverty threshold has risen and fallen, but has on average increased by a tenth of a percentage point per year.[92]

Increasing income inequality has had many effects on Californians' lives, including on life expectancy, which can be taken as a proxy for health or even general welfare. A study conducted by Clarke et al.[93] related life expectancy to socioeconomic status (SES, an index including income and other related factors), finding that Californians in the top 20% by SES live on average six years longer than those in the bottom 20% (81 years, compared to 75). This disparity becomes even more pronounced when intersected with race: White males in the top 20% live 14 years longer than African American males in the bottom 20% (for females, the difference is 10 years).[93]

The complexity of the state's low-income trends were visible when, in response to growing Chinese and Spanish-speaking populations, the city of Oakland implemented the nation's first policy of recruiting bilingual applicants for public-facing city jobs in 2001. This increased the employment of Hispanic and Chinese bilinguals throughout the public workforce, but also lowered (monolingual) Black employment.[94]

gollark: It makes BF derivatives with an extra instruction which does a technically distinct but pointless thing in each derivative.
gollark: BRB, making esolang generator.
gollark: make esolang or make spudnet protocol v4
gollark: Also, *wow* geometry is complicated.
gollark: Hmm, this is quite an old book.

See also

Media related to Demographics of California at Wikimedia Commons

Notes

  1. The following are a list of the indigenous languages: Root languages of California: Athabaskan Family: Hupa, Mattole, Lassik, Wailaki, Sinkyone, Cahto, Tolowa, Nongatl, Wiyot, Chilula; Hokan Family: Pomo, Shasta, Karok, Chimiriko; Algonquian Family: Whilkut, Yurok; Yukian Family: Wappo; Penutian Family: Modok, Wintu, Nomlaki, Konkow, Maidu, Patwin, Nisenan, Miwok, Coast Miwok, Lake Miwok, Ohlone, Northern Valley Yokuts, Southern Valley Yokuts, Foothill Yokuts; Hokan Family: Esselen, Salinan, Chumash, Ipai, Tipai, Yuma, Halchichoma, Mohave; Uto-Aztecan Family: Mono Paiute, Monache, Owens Valley Paiute, Tubatulabal, Panamint Shoshone, Kawaisu, Kitanemuk, Tataviam, Gabrielino, Juaneno, Luiseno, Cuipeno, Cahuilla, Serrano, Chemehuevi

References

  1. "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: California". www.census.gov. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  2. "Resident Population Data – 2010 Census". Census.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  3. "Quickfacts".
  4. Don Thompson (December 20, 2007). "California's population ahead of Canada, behind Poland at 37.8 million". San Diego Union Tribune. Associated Press. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
  5. "Statistical Abstract of the United States". Census.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  6. "Governor Edmund G. "Pat" Brown of California". California State Library. November 28, 2005. Archived from the original on January 14, 2010. Retrieved January 29, 2010.
  7. "California's population growth is slowing dramatically in the 21st century, study finds". Los Angeles Times. April 24, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  8. "California's population growth hits 80-year low". The Mercury News. December 23, 2019. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  9. Erin Treadwell (December 9, 2010). "California County Population Shows Little Growth". csas.counties.org. California State Association of Counties. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  10. "Qualifying Urban Areas for the 2010 Census". Federal Register. United States Government. March 27, 2012. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  11. Riquier, Andrea (May 6, 2018). "With no letup in home prices, the California exodus surges". MarketWatch. New York. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
    Brian Uhler; Justin Garosi (February 21, 2018). California Losing Residents Via Domestic Migration (Report). State of California. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
  12. Reese, Phillip. "Roughly 5 million people left California in the last decade. See where they went". Sacramento Bee. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
  13. "Cdc.gov" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  14. Population and Population Centers by State: 2010. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
  15. "California QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved July 16, 2016.
  16. "43% in state speak other than English at home". Articles.sfgate.com. September 23, 2008. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  17. Full parameter set in horizontal format Hill, Laura E.; Johnson, Hans P; Ezekiel, David; Hayes, Joseph M. (July 2011). "Silicon Valley Community Foundation". Unauthorized Immigrants in California (PDF) (Report). Public Policy Institute of California. Retrieved June 26, 2018.
  18. "Undocumented Immigrants in California". Ppic.org. Public Policy Institute of California. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  19. "Enrollment by Ethnicity for 2011–12: Statewide Enrollment by Ethnicity (with county data)". California Department of Education. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
  20. "State-to-State Migration Flows".
  21. "B03002 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY RACE - California - 2018 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. July 1, 2018. Retrieved November 25, 2019.
  22. "Historical Census Statistics on Population Totals By Race, California". Census.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  23. "California - ACS Demographic and Housing Estimates: 2006-2008". American Fact Finder. US Census Bureau. Retrieved December 26, 2009.
  24. "United States - ACS Demographic and Housing Estimates: 2006-2008". American Fact Finder. US Census Bureau. Archived from the original on February 11, 2020. Retrieved December 26, 2009.
  25. "California QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau - Race and Hispanic Origin". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved July 16, 2016.
  26. https://italoamericano.org/story/2014-6-24/Italian-Roots
  27. https://italoamericano.org/story/2014-6-24/Italian-Roots
  28. US Census Bureau (2016). "2012-2016 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates". Missing or empty |url= (help)
  29. Reese, Phillip; Magagnini, Stephen (June 30, 2015). "Census: Hispanics overtake whites to become California's largest ethnic group". The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  30. "the Swedish American Patriotic league". May 15, 2009. Archived from the original on May 15, 2009. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  31. "Fort Ross, California". Fortross.org. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  32. "A California Amish Community". amishamerica.com. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  33. https://italoamericano.org/story/2014-6-24/Italian-Roots
  34. https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?q=ancestry%20california&g=0400000US06&tid=ACSDT1Y2018.B04004&t=Ancestry&vintage=2018&hidePreview=true
  35. Montagne, Renee (June 8, 2006). "Living in Tehrangeles: L.A.'s Iranian Community". National Public Radio. Retrieved June 28, 2006.
  36. "Chaldean Chamber of Commerce". chaldeanchamber.com. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  37. "ARMENIAN PONTIFF BEGINS VISIT TO SOUTHLAND WITH ENCINO STOP." Los Angeles Daily News. June 17, 1988. Article ID 8801240266. "About 500000 Armenians live in California - more than half of them in the Los Angeles area."
  38. "California QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved July 16, 2016.
  39. https://www.migrationpolicy.org/data/state-profiles/state/demographics/CA
  40. https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2008/03/31/jamaican-culture-making-presence-felt/
  41. https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?q=ancestry%20california&g=0400000US06&tid=ACSDT1Y2018.B04004&t=Ancestry&vintage=2018&hidePreview=true
  42. Capitol Alert (December 23, 2013). "Capitol Alert: California has nation's largest Native American population". Sacramento Bee. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
  43. Newkirk, Barrett (October 13, 2013). "New tribal land tax law causing alarm in Palm Springs". The Desert Sun. Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  44. "ASIAN ALONE OR IN COMBINATION WITH ONE OR MORE OTHER RACES, AND WITH ONE OR MORE ASIAN CATEGORIES FOR SELECTED GROUPS". 2010 Census. U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on February 12, 2020. Retrieved January 5, 2012.
  45. Karen R. Humes; Nicholas A. Jones; Roberto R. Ramirez (March 2011). "Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: 2010" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. U.S. Department of Commerce. Retrieved January 5, 2012.
  46. "DP-1 Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 (2010 Census Summary File 2)". 2010 Census. United States Census Bureau. 2010. Archived from the original on February 12, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  47. Dan Walters (March 12, 2012). "California has by far nation's largest Asian-American population". Sacramento Bee. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  48. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/23518756/the_desert_sun/
  49. Archibold, Randal C. (August 20, 1993). "Political Awakening : Filipino-Americans Start to Reach for Reins of Power". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  50. Rodel Rodis (May 14, 2013). "Telltale Signs: "Why are there so many Filipino nurses in the US?"". Asian Week. Archived from the original on June 8, 2013. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
  51. "Total Ancestry Reported". 2009–2013 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates. United States Census Bureau. 2013. Archived from the original on December 27, 2014. Retrieved January 1, 2015.
  52. "Total Population". 2010 Census, United States Census Bureau. United States Department of Commerce. 2010. Archived from the original on February 12, 2020. Retrieved May 1, 2013.
  53. "Wayback Machine" (PDF). January 21, 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 21, 2015. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  54. "Population by Race and Hispanic or Latino Origin, for All Ages and for 18 Years and Over, for California: 2000" (PDF). Census.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  55. California Population Estimates, with Components of Change and Crude Rates, July 1, 1900-2019
  56. Reese, Phillip (May 17, 2018). "California birth rate falls again to record low". The Sacramento Bee. ISSN 0890-5738. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  57. "Births: Final Data for 2013" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  58. "Births: Final Data for 2014" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  59. "Births: Final Data for 2015" (PDF). Cdc.gov. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  60. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr67/nvsr67_01.pdf
  61. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr67/nvsr67_08-508.pdf
  62. "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
  63. "California". Modern Language Association. Retrieved August 11, 2013.
  64. Hyon B. Shin; Robert A. Kominski (April 2010). "Language Use in the United States: 2007" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. United States Department of Commerce. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  65. Native Tribes, Groups, Language Families and Dialects of California in 1770 (Map) (1966 ed.). Coyote Press. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  66. California Indians Root Languages and Tribal Groups (Map) (1994 ed.). California State Parks. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  67. "Indigenous Farmworker Study – Indigenous Mexicans in California Agriculture. Section V. Language and Culture" (PDF). 2013. Retrieved July 1, 2013.
  68. Wesson, Herb (July 17, 2001). "AB 800 Assembly Bill – Bill Analysis". California State Assembly. p. 3. Archived from the original on November 23, 2010. Retrieved December 27, 2009. In 1986, California voters amended the state constitution to provide that the: The [sic] Legislature and officials of the State of California shall take all steps necessary to insure that the role of English as the common language of the State of California is preserved and enhanced. The Legislature shall make no law which diminishes or ignores the role of English as the common language of California."
  69. Hull, Dana (May 20, 2006). "English already is "official" in California". San Jose Mercury News. San Jose, California: MediaNews Group. English has been the "official" language of California since 1986, when voters passed Proposition 63. You'd barely know it. The Santa Clara County Registrar of Voters prints ballots in English, Spanish, Vietnamese, Chinese and Tagalog. California drivers can take the written license exam in 31 languages, from Amharic, which is spoken in Ethiopia, to Thai. You can view the state's online Megan's Law database of registered sex offenders in Portuguese or Punjabi. [..] Proposition 63, which received 73 percent of the vote in 1986, was largely symbolic, sending a message to immigrants that they should learn to speak English if they expected to live in California. The measure directed the state to "preserve, protect and strengthen the English language," but did not call for any specific action or enforcement. Twenty-six other states have official-English laws on the books.
  70. "What other languages is the written or audio test available in?//Driver License and Identification (ID) Card Information". California Department of Motor Vehicles.
  71. Bucholtz, Mary; et all (December 2007). "Hella Nor Cal or Totally So Cal? : The Perceptual Dialectology of California". Journal of English Linguistics. 35 (4): 325–352. doi:10.1177/0075424207307780.
  72. "Religious Landscape Study". Pewforum.org. May 11, 2015. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  73. "USA-California - LDS Newsroom". The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Archived from the original on January 22, 2010. Retrieved January 29, 2010.
  74. Lewis, James R. "Diabolical Authority: Anton LaVey, The Satanic Bible and the Satanist" Tradition"." Marburg Journal of Religion 7.1 (2015).
  75. Enroth, Ronald. What is a Cult?. Intervarsity Press, 1982.
  76. "State Membership Report 2000". The Association of Religious Data Archives. 2002. Archived from the original on November 21, 2008. Retrieved January 29, 2010.
  77. Melton, J. Gordon, ed. (December 2002). "Eastern Family Part II: Buddhism, Shintoism, Japanese New Religions". Encyclopedia of American Religions (Seventh ed.). Detroit: Gale Cengage. pp. 201–211. ISBN 978-0-7876-6384-1. OCLC 51255717.
  78. Mark Davis (June 9, 2014). Lone Star America: How Texas Can Save Our Country. Regnery Publishing, Incorporated, An Eagle Publishing Company. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-62157-231-2.
    "SCR-32 Hindu American Awareness and Appreciation Month". California Legislative Information. State of California. August 29, 2014. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  79. Jacob Neusner (2009). World Religions in America: An Introduction. Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 180–181. ISBN 978-1-61164-047-2.
  80. https://jewishjournal.com/analysis/235555/deep-dive-jewish-la/
  81. BECERRA, HECTOR (July 4, 2014). "Repair work set to begin at neglected Jewish cemetery". Los Angeles Times. Rabbi Moshe Greenwald, co-director of Chabad of Downtown Los Angeles -- which has led the effort to restore Mount Zion -- said he hopes $700,000 can be raised to properly repair the cemetery, though there would be other ongoing costs after that. Greenwald said several people came forward to help, including businesspeople and real estate developers who gave donations. He said he even got a call from the L.A. Archdiocese, and that he hopes to speak to local church leaders to get the word out about the problem of vandalism.
  82. Posner, Menachem. "300 Rabbinical Students Heading Out for Summer Sojourns". Lubavitch World Headquarters. Chabad.org is a division of the Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center. Zarchi was followed by Rabbi Efraim Mintz, who served as a Roving Rabbi in California in 1990. Mintz, who directs the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute, shared tips and advice on honing a Torah “elevator pitch,” as well as ideas about presenting more advanced Torah thoughts on a variety of subjects to share with others during the course of their travels.
    Fishkoff, Sue (March 3, 2006). "That's Growth!". SAN RAFAEL, California: JTA. Shturem.net. Leading the class was Chabad Rabbi Yisrael Rice...Rice, chairman of the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute’s editorial board, asks members of the group why they’re there.
    Fishkoff, Sue (March 2, 2006). "Chabad institute keeps on growing". SAN RAFAEL, California. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Rice, chairman of the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute’s editorial board, asks members of the group why they’re there. “I’m trying to put some things together,” one man says. “I’m trying to fix a broken link,” the women next to him says. “Where am I going? God willing, I’m going closer,” the next woman says. Billed as a mystical approach to the concepts of time and the Jewish calendar, The Kabbalah of Time is the 14th course in adult Jewish literacy offered by JLI, a seven-year-old project of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement.
  83. "Largest Latter-day Saint Communities". Adherents.com. April 12, 2005. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  84. MacVean, Mary (July 11, 2015). "Why Loma Linda residents live longer than the rest of us: They treat the body like a temple". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 7, 2017.
  85. "Religion and Politics 2011: California". U.S. Religious Landscape Study. The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. 2011. Retrieved January 15, 2011.
  86. US Census Bureau (2017). Current Population Survey, Annual Social and Economic Supplement, 2017. Retrieved September 26, 2017.
  87. Sarah Bohn; Caroline Danielson; Tess Thorman (2017). "Poverty in California". Public Policy Institute of California. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  88. Sisney, Jason; Uhler, Brian (September 6, 2016). "Data on Real Income Growth Trends by Percentile, 1990-2014". Legislative Analyst's Office (California Legislature). Retrieved October 2, 2017.
  89. Hill, Elizabeth G. (2000). California's Changing Income Distribution (PDF). Legislative Analyst's Office (Califorrnia Legislature). Retrieved September 30, 2017.
  90. Flood, Sarah; King, Miriam; Ruggles, Steven; Warren, J. Robert (2015), Integrated Public Use Microdata Series, Current Population Survey: Version 4.0, Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota, retrieved October 2, 2017
  91. Clarke, Christina A.; Miller, Tim; Chang, Ellen T.; Yin, Daixin; Cockburn, Myles; Gomez, Scarlett L. (2010). "Racial and social class gradients in life expectancy in contemporary California". Social Science & Medicine. 70 (9): 1373–80. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.01.003. ISSN 0277-9536. PMC 2849870. PMID 20171001. ProQuest 230483088.
  92. Sewell, Abigail A. (2017). "THE (UN)INTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF BILINGUAL EMPLOYMENT POLICIES: Ethnoraciality and Labor Market Segmentation in Alameda County, CA". Du Bois Review; Cambridge. 14 (1): 117–143. doi:10.1017/S1742058X16000345. ISSN 1742-058X. ProQuest 1951745708.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.