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    Brazilian censuses do not use a "multiracial" category. Instead, the censuses use skin colour categories. Most Brazilians of visibly mixed racial origins self-identify as pardos. However, many White Brazilians have distant non-white ancestry, while the group known as pardos likely contains acculturated Amerindians.
    The Brazilian Multiracial Movement ( O Movimento Pardo-Mestiço, or MPMB), which was established in 2001 in Manaus, Amazonas, was the first collective challenge to this binary racial project. This is not surprising given the concentration of multiracials in Amazonas who identify with Native American ancestry.
    Most Brazilians of visibly mixed racial origins self-identify as pardos. However, many White Brazilians have distant non-white ancestry, while the group known as pardos likely contains acculturated Amerindians. According to the 2010 census, "pardos" make up 82.277 million people or 43.13% of Brazil's population.
    This theory was later challenged by several anthropologists who claim that, despite the race-mixing, the white Brazilian population still occupies the top of the Brazilian society, while Blacks, Indians and mixed-race people are largely found in the poor population. Ukrainian immigrants in Curitiba, celebrating the Ukrainian Easter.
  2. Salvador, Bahia - Wikipedia