Challenging the Hispanic Challenge
My first response to Huntington’s Foreign Policy essay — some of which appears in my latest TNR Online essay — is in this post from last week. Here’s a link to Samuel Huntington’s essay “The Hispanic Challenge“; you can purchase and advance copy of Who We Are here. If you study political science and don’t ...
My first response to Huntington's Foreign Policy essay -- some of which appears in my latest TNR Online essay -- is in this post from last week. Here's a link to Samuel Huntington's essay "The Hispanic Challenge"; you can purchase and advance copy of Who We Are here. If you study political science and don't have either Political Order in Changing Societies or The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, you should. The quotations in Clash in the essay come from pages 150 and 136 respectively. For a lovely biographical essay of Huntington, you could do far worse than Robert D. Kaplan's December 2001 Atlantic Monthly essay. For an excellent, dispassionate look at how the 19th century version of globalization affected the United States, see Kevin O'Rourke and Jeffrey Williamson's Globalization and History David Brooks' New York Times column from last Tuesday on Huntington provided the 60% figure on English-speaking habits among third-generation Hispanic Americans. I've disagreed with Huntington before -- see my review of The Clash of Civilizations in The Washington Quarterly here. The Franklin and Schlesinger quotes come from Schlesinger's July 1921 American Journal of Sociology fascinating essay, "The Significance of Immigration in American History." Some of you can access this on JSTOR. Frankin is quoted on p. 74; Schlesinger's quote comes from p. 83 of the article. The Lewis Mumford Center for Comparative Urban and Regional Research at the University of Albany is doing fascinating things with Census data on Hispanics. The report that's directly quoted can be found here, but check out this one on how race factors into the equation as well. I am exceedingly grateful to Robert Tagorda for posting about it. For an economic analysis of the immigration question, chapter 15 of Kenneth Dam's The Rules of the Global Game is an excellent starting point. Final effort towards full disclosure -- Huntington, in addition to founding Foreign Policy, also founded the John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies at Harvard University's Weatherhead Center for International Affairs. During the 1996-97 academic year, I was fortunate enough to be a post-doctoral fellow at that institute.
My first response to Huntington’s Foreign Policy essay — some of which appears in my latest TNR Online essay — is in this post from last week. Here’s a link to Samuel Huntington’s essay “The Hispanic Challenge“; you can purchase and advance copy of Who We Are here. If you study political science and don’t have either Political Order in Changing Societies or The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, you should. The quotations in Clash in the essay come from pages 150 and 136 respectively. For a lovely biographical essay of Huntington, you could do far worse than Robert D. Kaplan’s December 2001 Atlantic Monthly essay. For an excellent, dispassionate look at how the 19th century version of globalization affected the United States, see Kevin O’Rourke and Jeffrey Williamson’s Globalization and History David Brooks’ New York Times column from last Tuesday on Huntington provided the 60% figure on English-speaking habits among third-generation Hispanic Americans. I’ve disagreed with Huntington before — see my review of The Clash of Civilizations in The Washington Quarterly here. The Franklin and Schlesinger quotes come from Schlesinger’s July 1921 American Journal of Sociology fascinating essay, “The Significance of Immigration in American History.” Some of you can access this on JSTOR. Frankin is quoted on p. 74; Schlesinger’s quote comes from p. 83 of the article. The Lewis Mumford Center for Comparative Urban and Regional Research at the University of Albany is doing fascinating things with Census data on Hispanics. The report that’s directly quoted can be found here, but check out this one on how race factors into the equation as well. I am exceedingly grateful to Robert Tagorda for posting about it. For an economic analysis of the immigration question, chapter 15 of Kenneth Dam’s The Rules of the Global Game is an excellent starting point. Final effort towards full disclosure — Huntington, in addition to founding Foreign Policy, also founded the John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies at Harvard University’s Weatherhead Center for International Affairs. During the 1996-97 academic year, I was fortunate enough to be a post-doctoral fellow at that institute.
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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