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2016, Daniel K. Suda, Nicholas D. Hartlep, ““Balancing Two Worlds”: Supporting Transracially Adopted Asian/American Students on the College Campus”, in The Journal of Educational Foundations, volume 29, numbers 1–4, page 57:One of our assumptions in this study is that college campuses are normatively cisracial. We have adapted the term “cisracial” from gender identity studies’ use of the term “cisgender.” Johnson (2013) suggests that if an individual’s gender identity aligns with her/his sex morphology, s/he is said to be cisgender. We propose that “cisracial” means to align with the perceived race or heritage that society places on the individual. This study seeks to understand the ways to best engage the transracial adoptee population on the college campus as well as how to transform college campuses from employing cisracial paradigms to transracial integrative paradigms.
2016 September 20, CDB, “Re: No need to mention race”, in alt.usage.english (Usenet):
That White Americans are not as cisracial as they think they are.
2018 Winter, Chloë Taylor, “On Intellectual Generosity: A Response to Rebecca Tuvel’s “In Defense of Transracialism””, in Philosophy Today, volume 62, number 1, →DOI, page 6: I am curious about whether forty years from now feminists will look back on the current hatred for and public shaming of transracial and transabled people—and for a cisgender and cisracial author who dared to write on the topic—with the same embarrassment with which we now look back on the transphobia of feminism in the 1970s and ’80s.