A faculty member explains that four states and Washington, DC are known as "majority-minority" areas, meaning
a. areas where the minority population is expected to become the majority.
b. non-white, non-Hispanic individuals make up the population majority.
c. places where the majority group alternates between white and nonwhite.
d. regions where there is no dominant population group to make a majority.
B
In a majority-minority area, the total population of minorities (people other than single-race, non-Hispanic whites) make up the majority of the population.
An area where the minority population is expected to become the majority is not an example of a majority-minority.
A place where the majority group alternates between white and nonwhite does not fit the definition of "majority-minority."
In a majority-minority area, there is a majority, it just does not fit the traditional pattern of being white, non-Hispanic.
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