List of ethnic groups
In England and Wales, there is an agreed list of ethnic groups you can
use when asking for
someone’s ethnicity. The groups are usually those used in the Census, which happens every 10 years.
If you’re in a government service team, there’s a design pattern for asking users for equality
information , including their ethnic group.
Mục Lục
1. 2021 Census
The main changes to the 2021 Census of England and Wales, compared with the previous Census,
were:
- the ‘Roma’ group was added under the ‘White’ ethnic group
- a write-in response was added for the ‘Black African’ ethnic group
The ethnic groups were:
Asian or Asian British
- Indian
- Pakistani
- Bangladeshi
- Chinese
- Any other Asian background
Black, Black British, Caribbean or African
- Caribbean
- African
- Any other Black, Black British, or Caribbean background
Mixed or multiple ethnic groups
- White and Black Caribbean
- White and Black African
- White and Asian
- Any other Mixed or multiple ethnic background
White
- English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British
- Irish
- Gypsy or Irish Traveller
- Roma
- Any other White background
Other ethnic group
- Arab
- Any other ethnic group
In Wales, ‘Welsh’ is the first option in the White category.
2. How the groups were chosen
The Office for National Statistics runs the Census of England and Wales every 10 years.
They decide which ethnic groups to include in consultation with:
- users of Census data (like government departments, local authorities, and the National Health Service)
- people completing the Census, and the interest groups that represent them
- the organisations that run the Censuses in Northern Ireland and Scotland
It is recognised that these ethnic groups do not represent how all people identify. People are
encouraged to write in their ethnicity using their own words if they don’t identify with any groups in the list.
There has been an ethnicity question in the Census since 1991. It has been updated at every
new Census since then. There are separate questions in the Census about national identity, religion and language.
You can read more about:
3. Exceptions
The Government Statistical Service (GSS) has a harmonised standard for ethnicity classification.
The ethnic groups used in the harmonised standard and the latest Census are usually
the same. The harmonised standard is being reviewed and currently uses the ethnic groups from the 2011 Census.
Not all departments and organisations use the standardised list, for example if:
- they need data on some ethnic groups, but not others
- they want their data to be consistent with data they have collected previously, which uses different ethnic
groups - the small number of people surveyed in some ethnic groups means groups have to be combined to make statistics
more reliable, or to protect individual identities
The dashboard of ethnic categories shows that around 20 different
ethnicity classifications are used on Ethnicity facts and figures.
4. Scotland and Northern Ireland
The Censuses in Scotland and Northern Ireland use different ethnicity classifications.
Northern Ireland
The ethnicity question in the 2021 Census
in Northern Ireland asked people to choose from the following ethnic groups:
- Black African
- Black Other
- Chinese
- Filipino
- Indian
- Irish Traveller
- Mixed ethnic group
- Roma
- White
- Any other ethnic group
Scotland
Scotland’s next Census is in 2022. The ethnic groups will be:
Asian, Scottish Asian or British Asian
- Pakistani, Scottish Pakistani or British Pakistani
- Indian, Scottish Indian or British Indian
- Bangladeshi, Scottish Bangladeshi or British Bangladeshi
- Chinese, Scottish Chinese or British Chinese
- Other
African, Scottish African or British African
- Respondents write in their ethnic group
Caribbean or Black
- Respondents write in their ethnic group
Mixed or multiple ethnic group
- Respondents write in their ethnic group
White
- Scottish
- Other British
- Irish
- Polish
- Gypsy or Traveller
- Roma
- Showman or Showwoman
- Other
Other ethnic group
- Arab, Scottish Arab or British Arab
- Other (for example, Sikh, Jewish)
5. Combining data
If you need to combine data for the different countries of the UK, you can use the GSS
harmonised categories for either:
These harmonised classifications are based on the 2011 Censuses.
6. 2011 Census
The main changes to the 2011 Census of England and Wales, compared with the previous Census,
were:
- the Chinese ethnic group moved from the ‘Other’ ethnic group (in 2001) to the ‘Asian’ ethnic group (in 2011)
- there were no ‘Gypsy or Irish Traveller’ or ‘Arab’ groups listed in 2001
The ethnic groups were:
Asian or Asian British
- Indian
- Pakistani
- Bangladeshi
- Chinese
- Any other Asian background
Black, African, Caribbean or Black British
- African
- Caribbean
- Any other Black, African or Caribbean background
Mixed or multiple ethnic groups
- White and Black Caribbean
- White and Black African
- White and Asian
- Any other Mixed or multiple ethnic background
White
- English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British
- Irish
- Gypsy or Irish Traveller
- Any other White background
Other ethnic group
- Arab
- Any other ethnic group
7. 2001 Census
Some data on Ethnicity facts and figures still uses the ethnic groups from the 2001 Census
when recording people’s ethnicity.
The ethnic groups were:
Asian or Asian British
- Indian
- Pakistani
- Bangladeshi
- Any other Asian background
Black or Black British
- Caribbean
- African
- Any other Black background
Mixed
- White and Black Caribbean
- White and Black African
- White and Asian
- Any other Mixed background
White
- British
- Irish
- Any other White background
Chinese or other ethnic group
- Chinese
- Any other