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Who We Are Now : The Changing Face of America in the 21st Century
by Times Books
Who We Are Now : The Changing Face of America in the 21st Century - Click to Enlarge
Avg. Rating: 3 of 5 stars (based on 2 reviews)
$2.95 to $27.50 from 4 stores
A revealing view of America and its citizens at the dawn of a new century, by the author of the New… Read more
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Product Description
Who We Are Now : The Changing Face of America in the 21st Century
Book Description
A revealing view of America and its citizens at the dawn of a new century, by the author of the New York Times Notable Book Who We Are

For more than two centuries, America has taken stock every decade, producing a statistical self-portrait of our population. In Who We Are Now, Sam Roberts identifies and illuminates the trends and social shifts changing the face of America today.

America is in the midst of a fundamental transformation. The nation's complexion changed significantly over the twentieth century, creating more varied and intermingled identities, and with the baby boomers nearing retirement and their children entering college, the graying of America has been balanced, precariously, by the youth culture. And in the wake of welfare reform in the 1990s, the fate of the working poor has become all the more tenuous. Roberts masterfully weaves stories of individuals from all corners of the country alongside the data from the latest U.S. census, creating a compelling guided tour of the places, personalities, and politics that will shape America as the new century stretches before us.
Customer Reviews
1 out of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3 of 5 stars  What We Are Becoming.
Thursday, March 24, 2005
This research is based on the 2000 census. It shows a very profound change from the 1990 census, after which this writer presented his version of WHAT WE ARE. It was a hard decade for most of us as the world continues to change and take us with it.

In 1950, only ten percent of the population of the United States was non-white. Today, one in four Americans are black, Hispanic, or Asian. No country is home to more foreigners than the U.S. We now have people here from Ukraine, India, even the Middle East.

In the 19th century, we invented the telegraph, telephones, and electric lights. Then came radio, t.v., airplanes, automobiles, and the atom bomb. Along, came immigrants in droves. After WWII, the Japanese were given entry as we rebuilt their country. For half a century, this country absorbed immigrants from every corner of Europe.

The United States was 40% of the world's population in 2000 in every way. India has four times the population of U.S. but fewer people age 80 or older. By 2011, the number of elderly will increase dramatically as the 'baby boomers' turn 65.

By 2025, the population is projected to grow by 23%. In 2040, if no catastrophe overtakes us, Americans may outnumber western Europeans. In 2050, the proportion of old people will have doubled. By 2100, nonwhites and Hispanics are projected to make up 60% of the U.S. population.

H. G. Wells wrote, "the race between education and catastrophe is far from over." How the 21st century is determined by numbers but also by the vagaries of human nature.

Sam Roberts wrote THE UNTOLD STORY OF THE ROSENBERG CASE, is host of a daily t.v. interview show in New York City, and has been reporter, journalist, and an editor of the New York Times since 1983. He includes a bibliography, multiple charts, and extensive index to show the factual material he uses.

5 out of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3 of 5 stars  Information overload!!!!
Friday, October 01, 2004
Imagine the daunting task of taking the raw data from the 2000 U.S. census and trying to make sense of it all? "Who We Are Now" is author Sam Roberts heroic attempt to do just that. In fact, Roberts, a veteran New York Times journalist wrote just such a book a decade ago based on the 1990 census. I did not read that one but I must warn you that I found getting through the sequel to be a bit tedious at times. There are simply too many statistics for the average reader to process. I often became confused and as a result I lost interest in the points the author was attempting to convey.
Having said that, the reader is still likely to come away from this book with a better understanding of who we are as a people and of the emerging trends in the country. You'll learn how the racial and ethnic composition of the nation is undergoing dramatic changes, where our citizens are moving to and from and what the consequences might be of our aging population. But at the end of the day I think I would prefer to read about such issues in books primarily devoted to those topics. And while I commend Sam Roberts for his attempt, in my judgement "Who We Are Now" is far more appropriate as a research volume for scholars than a book one would read from cover to cover.
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