The titles of articles for immigrant and ethnic minority groups are a controversial issue on Wikipedia. Wikipedia does not have any required naming convention for such articles, and this proposed guideline does not seek to mandate one. Instead, it merely describes existing practises, expands on how existing guidelines and policies such as Wikipedia:Naming conventions (common names) and Wikipedia:No original research apply to articles in this topic area, and points to previous discussions and other resources of interest.

If you would like to rename articles in this topic area, you should open a discussion on the Wikipedia:Requested moves page. Building consensus for article renaming helps to minimise friction between editors and ensures that a variety of options are explored before a decision is made.

Option 1: Combining demonyms[edit]

One common way to describe immigrant groups is by combining the demonyms of their country/region of origin and country/region of destination. Pluralisation and hyphenation vary. For example, for immigrants from Fooland to Barland:

There is no grammatical requirement in the English language that the name of an immigrant group must have the country of ethnic origin first and the country of citizenship/residence second. Wikipedia:Naming conventions (categories)#Heritage permits both, stating:

In practise, this recommended use of the hyphen has often been disputed[1] because many Asian American groups object to the use of the hyphen, and because the United States Census Bureau explicitly does not use the hyphen.[2]

If reliable sources predominantly use one name (ordering and hyphenation) to refer to a specific group, and that title is reasonably unambiguous, it should be used as the article title. However, there are some reservations:

Option 2: Local names[edit]

Frequently, these are also the self-identifying name of the group in question, and may be in the language of the origin or destination country. Examples include:

In some cases, these names help to delineate groups whose boundaries of membership cut across lines of residence, citizenship, and ethnicity. However, foreign-language terms are often opaque to non-specialist readers; per Wikipedia:Naming conventions (use English), if the name is not widely used by English-language sources to refer to the group in question, Wikipedians should not seek to introduce such names for use as article titles, though they may still be mentioned in the article body.

Option 3: Descriptive titles[edit]

In cases where reliable sources don't predominantly use any titles which belong to Option 1 or Option 2, the remaining option is to use a long title which explicitly spells out which country is the origin and which is the destination:

Some patterns which are also seen, but not accepted by all editors, include:

Other notes[edit]

Decorating articles about immigrant ethnic groups with the flags of the country of origin and the country of residence is not recommended. See Wikipedia:Manual of style (flags).

Notes and references[edit]

  1. ^ See Wikipedia:Categories_for_deletion/Log/2006_July_14#unhyphenated-American or Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2008_January_30#foo_Americans_..._to_foo-Americans
  2. ^ Smith, Amy Symens (December 1998). "The American Community Survey and Intercensal Population Estimates: Where Are The Crossroads?". Retrieved 2008-02-06.
  3. ^ For example, Seung-Hui Cho is categorised as a Korean American. Editors of that page have disputed this categorisation because he lacks American citizenship; see Talk:Seung-Hui Cho/Archive 3#Category:Korean Americans_.7C. Outside of Wikipedia, some sources use the term "Korean American" expansively to include immigrants who have not naturalised.
  4. ^ This was deemed to be the case for Koreans in China and Ethnic Chinese in Korea: both are commonly referred to as "Chinese Korean" or "Korean Chinese" in books and papers (as well as by Chinese and Korean readings of local names). See Talk:Koreans in China#Where should this page move to?
  5. ^ See Talk:Chinese French#Survey
  6. ^ See Talk:Japanese diaspora/Archive 1