My guess is most want money or compensation and don’t care about the educational purpose behind it. Whereas white people have more curiosity about that.
For example, outside of Asians and whites, blacks largely have ancestry in Africa, Hispanics in South America, Indians in India, etc. so no real need to dig deep into genome, whereas average white people have genetic ancestry such as German, Russian, Dutch, French, Spanish, Welsh, etc.
I agree with AgilePickle1123 about the most likely cause. Other reasons that have been put forward include language barriers, distrust of science/medicine, and some claim that they actually do want to participate but it is "white supremacy" keeping them out of these studies
Why is that?
My guess is most want money or compensation and don’t care about the educational purpose behind it. Whereas white people have more curiosity about that.
For example, outside of Asians and whites, blacks largely have ancestry in Africa, Hispanics in South America, Indians in India, etc. so no real need to dig deep into genome, whereas average white people have genetic ancestry such as German, Russian, Dutch, French, Spanish, Welsh, etc.
I agree with AgilePickle1123 about the most likely cause. Other reasons that have been put forward include language barriers, distrust of science/medicine, and some claim that they actually do want to participate but it is "white supremacy" keeping them out of these studies