Citations:transracial

interracial

 * 2008, Rita James Simon, Sarah Hernandez, Native American Transracial Adoptees Tell Their Stories ISBN 0739124935: This study focuses on the lives of Native American transracial adoptees and their struggle to establish a healthy sense of cultural identity, while being raised in non-Native homes.

changing or having changed race

 * Etymology: the word was formed by analogy to the word transgender, and was popularized by reporting on Rachel Dolezal.


 * 2004, John R. Rowan, War and Terrorism (page 189)
 * Given that public healthcare systems in several jurisdictions already fund transsexual surgery, it would be inconsistent and probably discriminatory not to fund transracial surgery.
 * 2005, "" (South Park TV episode)
 * GERALD: Oh, just great! You see, Sheila?! This is what your transgender progressive thinking gets you! Now your son wants to be transracial!
 * 2009, Laurie J. Shrage, You've Changed: Sex Reassignment and Personal Identity
 * In a far more nuanced treatment of the analogy, third, Christine Overall seeks to make some unarticulated judgments explicit by exploring the if-then statement, "if transsexual surgery is morally acceptable ... then transracial surgery should be morally acceptable."
 * Otto F. von Feigenblatt, The Fallacy of Race: A Post-Racial America, in the Journal of Alternative Perspectives in the Social Sciences, volume 7 (2015), number 1:
 * A broader coalition of marginalized Americans could potentially challenge the entire system or at least the most important tenets on which it is based. Reactions to the Dolezal controversy from both sides of the political spectrum show this ambiguity towards a transracial identity.