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Encyclopedia > Pacific Islanders

A Pacific Islander or Pacific Person (plural: Pacific People) is a term used in several places, such as New Zealand and the United States, to describe people of a certain heritage


In New Zealand, it is applied to a person who has emigrated from one of the smaller islands of the Pacific to New Zealand in modern times, or one of their descendants born in New Zealand. While the majority of these people originate from Polynesia, others come from Micronesia and Melanesia. The term is used to distinguish these people from the indigenous New Zealand Maori (who are also Polynesian but arrived in New Zealand many centuries earlier), and from other ethnic groups. A major reason for making the ethnic distinction is that the Pacific People collectively suffer from socio-economic disadvantages and require culturally targeted social and health assistance.


In the United States it refers to people from the same locations living in the U.S. except Native Hawaiians. This would not include New Zealanders. For instance U.S. Census category was "Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islander"(NHOPI). NHOPI refers to people having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands. It includes people who indicated their race or races as "Native Hawaiian", "Guamanian or Chamorro", "Samoan", or "Other Pacific Islander", or wrote in entries such as Tahitian, Mariana Islander, or Chuukese. Inhabitants of Chinese, Japanese, Philippine, and Indonesian islands are not considered Pacific Islanders and are classified as "Asians" on the U.S. Census.


See also

  • American Pacific Islander
  • Closing the gaps
  • History of Oceania
  • History of the Pacific Islands

  Results from FactBites:
 
Pacific Islander Americans, Diet of - Nutrition and health status, Eating habits and meal patterns, Nutritional ... (951 words)
Pacific Islanders may be genetically predisposed to store fat for times of scarcity (the "thrifty gene" phenotype), and there is evidence that prenatal undernutrition modifies fetal development, predisposing individuals to adult obesity and chronic diseases.
Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander population alone in 2000 was 398,835.
The cuisine of Pacific Islander Americans varies slightly from culture to culture and is a blend of native foods and European, Japanese, American, and Asian influences.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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