The Race Variable
How Statistical Practices Reinforce Inequality
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Columbia University Press
Publishing:9th Dec '25
£28.00
This title is due to be published on 9th December, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

From social science and biomedical research to government and media reporting, statistics on racial and ethnic disparities are everywhere. The numbers we typically encounter, however, are not straightforward comparisons. Researchers analyze data using adjustments such as regression models that are intended to address bias and confounding factors. Yet many common statistical practices produce misleading results, and some have flawed assumptions that inadvertently misrepresent the inequalities between groups.
Jay S. Kaufman offers a clear and accessible guide to understanding the use and abuse of statistics on racial and ethnic disparities. Examining dozens of real-world examples spanning medicine, economics, education, and criminal justice, he shows how typical statistical practices—no matter how well-intentioned—have obscured the realities of injustice, with significant consequences for public policy. Kaufman considers how to select and apply statistical adjustments responsibly and systematically, and he proposes ways to improve the explanation and analysis of racial and ethnic inequalities.
Written for readers without a background in statistics, this book provides an essential introduction to quantitative reasoning in terms of social justice. The Race Variable is appropriate for undergraduate and graduate courses across the medical and social sciences—including sociology, demography, public health, epidemiology, medicine, and public policy—that focus on racial and ethnic disparities, and for all readers interested in the statistical foundations of our understanding of inequality.
This book provides an invaluable cautionary tale, describing the many kinds of mistakes that are routinely made in the medical literature with regards to race and ethnicity and offering guidance to practitioners and researchers alike. -- David S. Jones, author of Broken Hearts: The Tangled History of Cardiac Care
The Race Variable is simultaneously a primer on the use of statistics in the study of health disparities and an advanced master class in epidemiology. Kaufman has produced a book that will be useful to both a lay audience and to seasoned professionals by meticulously illuminating the pitfalls and hidden assumptions about how we use racial categories. -- Troy Duster, author of Backdoor to Eugenics
ISBN: 9780231213639
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
256 pages