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Samuel P. Huntington

Samuel Phillips Huntington (April 18, 1927 – December 24, 2008) was an American political scientist, adviser, and academic. He spent more than half a century at Harvard University, where he was director of Harvard's Center for International Affairs and the Albert J. Weatherhead III University Professor.

Samuel P. Huntington
Huntington in 2004
Born
Samuel Phillips Huntington

(1927-04-18)April 18, 1927
New York City, U.S.
DiedDecember 24, 2008(2008-12-24) (aged 81)
Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, U.S.
EducationYale University (BA)
University of Chicago (MA)
Harvard University (PhD)
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Nancy Arkelyan
(m. 1957)
Academic background
ThesisClientelism: A Study in Administrative Politics (1951)
InfluencesZbigniew Brzezinski
Feliks Koneczny[1]
Academic work
DisciplinePolitical science
International relations
InstitutionsHarvard University
Columbia University
Doctoral students
Notable worksPolitical Order in Changing Societies (1968)
The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order (1996)
Notable ideas
Influenced

During the presidency of Jimmy Carter, Huntington was the White House Coordinator of Security Planning for the National Security Council.

Huntington is best known for his 1993 theory, the "Clash of Civilizations" otherwise known as COC, of a post–Cold War new world order. He argued that future wars would be fought not between countries, but between cultures, and that Islamic civilization would become the biggest threat to Western domination of the world. Huntington is credited with helping to shape American views on civilian-military relations, political development, and comparative government.[3] According to the Open Syllabus Project, Huntington is the second most frequently cited author on college syllabi for political science courses.[4]

Early life and education edit

Huntington was born on April 18, 1927, in New York City, the son of Dorothy Sanborn (née Phillips), a short-story writer, and Richard Thomas Huntington, a publisher of hotel trade journals.[5][6] His grandfather was publisher John Sanborn Phillips. He graduated with distinction from Yale University at age 18. He served in the U.S. Army from April 1946 to May 1947 and was stationed at Fort Eustis, Virginia.[7] He then earned his master's degree from the University of Chicago, and completed his PhD at Harvard University, where he began teaching at age 23.[8][3]

Academic career edit

Huntington was a member of Harvard's department of government from 1950 until he was denied tenure in 1959.[9] Along with Zbigniew Brzezinski, who had also been denied tenure, he moved to Columbia University in New York. From 1959 to 1962 he was an associate professor of government at Columbia, where he was also associate director of their Institute of War and Peace Studies.[3] Huntington was invited to return to Harvard with tenure in 1963 and remained there until his death. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1965.[10] Huntington and Warren Demian Manshel co-founded and co-edited Foreign Policy. Huntington stayed as co-editor until 1977.[11]

Huntington's first major book was The Soldier and the State: The Theory and Politics of Civil-Military Relations (1957), which was highly controversial when it was published, but at present is regarded as the most influential book on American civil-military relations.[12][13][14] He became prominent with his Political Order in Changing Societies (1968), a work that challenged the conventional opinion of modernization theorists, that economic and social progress would produce stable democracies in recently decolonized countries. He also was co-author of The Crisis of Democracy: On the Governability of Democracies, a report issued by the Trilateral Commission in 1976. In 1977, his friend Brzezinski – who had been appointed National Security Adviser in the administration of Jimmy Carter – invited Huntington to become White House Coordinator of Security Planning for the National Security Council. He served in this position until the end of 1978.

Huntington served as an instructor at MIT Seminar XXI.[15] He continued to teach undergraduates until his retirement in 2007.

Personal life edit

Huntington met his wife, Nancy Arkelyan, when they were working together on a speech for 1956 presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson. They had two sons, Nicholas and Timothy.[3]

After several years of declining health, Huntington died on December 24, 2008, at age 81 in Martha's Vineyard.[5]

Notable arguments edit

The Soldier and the State edit

In The Soldier and the State: The Theory and Politics of Civil-Military Relations (1957),[16] Huntington presents a general theory of civil–military relations. Huntington proposes a theory of objective civilian control, according to which the optimal means of asserting control over the armed forces is to professionalize them.

Political Order in Changing Societies edit

In 1968, just as the United States' war in Vietnam was becoming most intense, Huntington published Political Order in Changing Societies, which was a critique of the modernization theory which had affected much US policy regarding the developing world during the prior decade.

Huntington argued that as societies modernize, they become more complex and disordered. If the process of social modernization that produces this disorder is not matched by a process of political and institutional modernization—a process which produces political institutions capable of managing the stress of modernization—the result may be violence.

During the 1970s, Huntington was an advisor to governments, both democratic and dictatorial. During 1972, he met with Medici government representatives in Brazil; a year later he published the report "Approaches to Political Decompression", warning against the risks of a too-rapid political liberalization, proposing gradual liberalization, and a strong party state modeled upon the image of the Mexican Institutional Revolutionary Party. After a prolonged transition, Brazil became democratic during 1985.

During the 1980s, he became a valued adviser to the South African regime, which used his ideas on political order to craft its "total strategy" to reform apartheid and suppress growing resistance. He assured South Africa's rulers that increasing the repressive power of the state (which at that time included police violence, detention without trial, and torture) can be necessary to effect reform. The reform process, he told his South African audience, often requires "duplicity, deceit, faulty assumptions and purposeful blindness." He thus gave his imprimatur to his hosts' project of "reforming" apartheid rather than eliminating it.[17]

Huntington frequently cited Brazil as a success, alluding to his role in his 1988 presidential address to the American Political Science Association, commenting that political science played a modest role in this process. Critics, such as British political scientist Alan Hooper, note that contemporary Brazil has an especially unstable party system, wherein the best institutionalized party, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's Workers' Party, emerged in opposition to controlled transition. Moreover, Hooper claims that the lack of civil participation in contemporary Brazil results from that top-down process of political participation transitions.

The Third Wave edit

In his 1991 book The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century, Huntington made the argument that beginning with Portugal's revolution during 1974, there has been a third wave of democratization which describes a global trend which includes more than 60 countries throughout Europe, Latin America, Asia, and Africa which have undergone some form of democratic transition. Huntington won the 1992 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for this book.[18]

"The Clash of Civilizations" edit

 
Map of the nine "civilizations" from Huntington's "Clash of Civilizations"

In 1993, Huntington provoked great debate among international relations theorists with the interrogatively titled "The Clash of Civilizations?", an influential, oft-cited article published in Foreign Affairs magazine. In the article, he argued that, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Islam would become the biggest obstacle to Western domination of the world. The West's next big war therefore, he said, would inevitably be with Islam.[19] Its description of post-Cold War geopolitics and the "inevitability of instability" contrasted with the influential "End of History" thesis advocated by Francis Fukuyama.

Huntington expanded "The Clash of Civilizations?" to book length and published it as The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order in 1996. The article and the book posit that post-Cold War conflict would most frequently and violently occur because of cultural rather than ideological differences. That, whilst in the Cold War, conflict occurred between the Capitalist West and the Communist Bloc East, it now was most likely to occur between the world's major civilizations—identifying seven, and a possible eighth: (i) Western, (ii) Latin American, (iii) Islamic, (iv) Sinic (Chinese), (v) Hindu, (vi) Orthodox, (vii) Japanese, and (viii) African. This cultural organization contrasts the contemporary world with the classical notion of sovereign states. To understand current and future conflict, cultural rifts must be understood, and culture—rather than the State—must be accepted as the reason for war. Thus, Western nations will lose predominance if they fail to recognize the irreconcilable nature of cultural tensions. Huntington argued that this post-Cold War shift in geopolitical organization and structure requires the West to strengthen itself culturally, by abandoning the imposition of its ideal of democratic universalism and its incessant military interventionism. Underscoring this point, Huntington wrote in the 1996 expansion, "In the emerging world of ethnic conflict and civilizational clash, Western belief in the universality of Western culture suffers three problems: it is false; it is immoral; and it is dangerous."[20]

The identification of Western Civilization with Western Christianity (Catholic-Protestant) was not Huntington's original idea, it was rather the traditional Western opinion and subdivision before the Cold War era.[21] Critics (for example articles in Le Monde Diplomatique) call The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order the theoretical legitimization of American-caused Western aggression against China and the world's Islamic and Orthodox cultures. Other critics argue that Huntington's taxonomy is simplistic and arbitrary, and does not take account of the internal dynamics and partisan tensions within civilizations. Furthermore, critics argue that Huntington neglects ideological mobilization by elites and unfulfilled socioeconomic needs of the population as the real causal factors driving conflict, that he ignores conflicts that do not fit well with the civilizational borders identified by him, and they charge that his new paradigm is nothing but realist thinking in which "states" became replaced by "civilizations".[22] Huntington's influence upon US policy has been likened to that of historian Arnold Toynbee's controversial religious theories about Asian leaders during the early twentieth century. The New York Times obituary on Huntington states that his "emphasis on ancient religious empires, as opposed to states or ethnicities, [as sources of global conflict] gained ... more cachet after the Sept. 11 attacks."[23]

Huntington wrote that Ukraine might divide along the cultural line between the more Catholic western Ukraine and Orthodox eastern Ukraine:

While a statist approach highlights the possibility of a Russian-Ukrainian war, a civilizational approach minimizes that and instead highlights the possibility of Ukraine splitting in half, a separation which cultural factors would lead one to predict might be more violent than that of Czechoslovakia but far less bloody than that of Yugoslavia.[24]

Who Are We and immigration edit

Huntington's last book, Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity, was published in May 2004. Its subject is the meaning of American national identity and what he describes as a cultural threat from large-scale immigration by Latinos, which Huntington says could "divide the United States into two peoples, two cultures, and two languages". In this book, he called for America to force immigrants to "adopt English" and the US to turn to "Protestant religions" to "save itself against the threats" of Latino and Islamic immigrants. In a book review for the academic journal Perspectives on Politics, Gary M. Segura, Dean of the UCLA School of Public Affairs,[25] asserted that the book should not be considered social science because of its divisive views and rhetoric.[26] Segura also called Huntington's writing of the book unforgivable on account of Huntington's academic position, saying that the work was a polemic rather than a work of scholarship.[26]

Other edit

Huntington is credited with inventing the phrase Davos Man, referring to global elites who "have little need for national loyalty, view national boundaries as obstacles that thankfully are vanishing, and see national governments as residues from the past whose only useful function is to facilitate the elite's global operations". The phrase refers to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where leaders of the global economy meet.[27]

National Academy of Sciences controversy edit

In 1986, Huntington was nominated for membership to the National Academy of Sciences. The nomination was opposed by Serge Lang, a Yale University mathematician inspired by the writings of mathematician Neal Koblitz, who had accused Huntington of misusing mathematics and engaging in pseudo-science. Lang claimed that Huntington distorted the historical record and used pseudo-mathematics to make his conclusions seem convincing. Lang's campaign succeeded; Huntington was twice nominated and twice rejected. A detailed description of these events was published by Lang in "Academia, Journalism, and Politics: A Case Study: The Huntington Case" which occupies the first 222 pages of his 1998 book Challenges.[28]

Huntington's prominence as a Harvard professor and director of Harvard's Center for International Affairs led to significant media coverage of his defeated nomination to the NAS, including by The New York Times and The New Republic.[29][30] His supporters included Herbert A. Simon, a 1978 laureate of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel. Simon and Koblitz debated in multiple issues of Mathematical Intelligencer, with other mathematicians joining in through Letters to the Editors column.[31][32][33][34][35]

Selected publications edit

As editor:

  • Culture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress with Lawrence E. Harrison (2000)
  • Many Globalizations : Cultural Diversity in the Contemporary World with Peter L. Berger (2002)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Biliński P.Feliks Karol Koneczny - Droga Kariery Akademickiej (in Polish) (English summary @ PubMed), Kwart Hist Nauki Tech.
  2. ^ Smith, Michael A.; Anderson, Kevin; Rackaway, Chapman (2015). State Voting Laws in America: Historical Statutes and Their Modern Implications. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 73. doi:10.1057/9781137483584. ISBN 978-1-137-48358-4.
  3. ^ a b c d Lewin, Tamar (December 28, 2008). "Samuel P. Huntington, 81, Political Scientist, Is Dead". The New York Times. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
  4. ^ "Open Syllabus Project". Retrieved November 5, 2023.
  5. ^ a b Hart, Dan (December 27, 2008). "Samuel Huntington, Harvard Political Scientist, Dies". Bloomberg News.
  6. ^ "POINTER - Journals - 2009 - Volume 35 Number 1 - Featured Author: Samuel P Huntington". Mindef.gov.sg. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  7. ^ "Index Record for Samuel Huntington (1927) US, Veterans Affairs Beneficiary Identification Records Locator Subsystem Death File, 1850-2010", Fold3 by Ancestry.com website. Retrieved November 30, 2023. Enlistment Date is listed as "17 Apr 1946" and Release Date is listed as "11 May 1947".
  8. ^ . Department of Government, Harvard University. Archived from the original on April 30, 2008. Retrieved December 27, 2008.
  9. ^ "Professor Samuel Huntington author of The Clash of Civilizations". The Times. London. December 29, 2008.
  10. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter H" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved April 22, 2011.
  11. ^ "Samuel Huntington, 81, political scientist, scholar | Harvard Gazette". News.harvard.edu. February 5, 2009. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  12. ^ Michael C. Desch. 1998. "Soldiers, States, and Structures: The End of the Cold War and Weakening U.S. Civilian Control." Armed Forces & Society. 24(3): pages 389–405.
  13. ^ Michael C. Desch. 2001. Civilian Control of the Military: The Changing Security Environment. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  14. ^ Peter D. Feaver. 1996. "An American Crisis in Civilian Control and Civil-Military Relations?" The Tocqueville Review. 17(1): 159.
  15. ^ Art, Robert (September 1, 2015). "From the Director: September, 2015". MIT Seminar XXI. Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  16. ^ "Samuel P. Huntington The Soldier And The State :the Theory And Politics Of Civil Military Relations Belknap Press (1957)" – via Internet Archive.
  17. ^ Joseph Lelyveld, Move Your Shadow (New York, 1985), pages 68–69; Shula Marks and Stanley Trapido, "South Africa Since 1976: an historical perspective," in Shaun Johnson, ed., South Africa: No Turning Back (London, 1988), pages 28–29
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on December 2, 2013.
  19. ^ Haruna, Mohammed (September 26, 2001). "Nigeria: September 11 And Huntington's Prophecy". Daily Trust.
  20. ^ "A Guide to the Work of Samuel Huntington". contemporarythinkers.org.
  21. ^ Peter Harrison, An Eccentric Tradition: The Paradox of 'Western Values'
  22. ^ see Richard E. Rubenstein and Jarle Crocker (1994): Challenging Huntington, in: Foreign Policy, Number 96 (Autumn, 1994), pages 113–28
  23. ^ Samuel P. Huntington of Harvard Dies at 81, The New York Times, December 27, 2008
  24. ^ "Testing Huntington in Ukraine". European Tribune.
  25. ^ "Gary Segura Dean UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs". September 4, 2019.
  26. ^ a b Segura, Gary M. (2005). "Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity". Perspectives on Politics. 3 (03). doi:10.1017/S1537592705460259. S2CID 143248422.
  27. ^ Davos man's death wish, The Guardian, 3 February 2006
  28. ^ Lang, Serge (1999). Challenges. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-94861-4.
  29. ^ Boffey, Philip M. (April 29, 1987). "Prominent Harvard Scholar Barred by Science Academy". The New York Times. section A, page 1. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved October 20, 2023.
  30. ^ Zakaria, Fareed (July 27, 1987). "Blood lust in academia: The professor's vendetta". The New Republic. Vol. 197, no. 4. pp. 16–18.
  31. ^ Koblitz, Neal (December 1, 1988). "A tale of three equations; or the emperors have no clothes". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 10 (1): 4–10. doi:10.1007/BF03023843. ISSN 0343-6993. S2CID 121312716.
  32. ^ Koblitz, Neal (December 1, 1988). "Reply to unclad emperors". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 10 (1): 14–16. doi:10.1007/BF03023845. ISSN 0343-6993. S2CID 123030288.
  33. ^ Simon, Herbert A.; Koblitz, Neal (March 1, 1988). "Opinion". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 10 (2): 10–12. doi:10.1007/BF03028350. ISSN 0343-6993.
  34. ^ Simon, Herbert A. (December 1, 1988). "Unclad emperors: A case of mistaken identity". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 10 (1): 11–14. doi:10.1007/BF03023844. ISSN 0343-6993. S2CID 123171596.
  35. ^ Aubert, Karl Egil; Todorov, Audrey; Lazarus, Andrew J.; Simon, Herbert A.; Akin, Ethan; Koblitz, Neal (September 1, 1988). "Letters to the editor". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 10 (4): 3–6. doi:10.1007/BF03023736. ISSN 0343-6993. S2CID 189886367.

Further reading edit

  • Meaney, Thomas. "The Return of 'The West'" New York Times March 11, 2022.
  • Interview by Richard Snyder: "Samuel P. Huntington: Order and Conflict in Global Perspective," pages 210–233, in Gerardo L. Munck and Richard Snyder, Passion, Craft, and Method in Comparative Politics (Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007).

External links edit

  • Samuel Huntington explaining himself his book and thesis about the clash of civilization in a 1997 interview with Charlie Rose April 2, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • The Crisis of Democracy August 21, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Trilateral Commission report
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Sam Huntington discusses "Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity" with Jenny Attiyeh on Thoughtcast
  • by Amina R. Chaudary – a 2006 interview with Islamica Magazine
  • by James Kurth
  • Samuel Huntington, a prophet for the Trump era by Carlos Lozada, The Washington Post, July 18, 2017
Academic offices
New office Albert J. Weatherhead III University Professor Succeeded by
Professional and academic associations
Preceded by President of the American
Political Science Association

1986–1987
Succeeded by
Awards
Preceded by Grawemeyer Award for
Ideas Improving World Order

1992
With: John B. Cobb and Herman Daly
Succeeded by

samuel, huntington, samuel, phillips, huntington, april, 1927, december, 2008, american, political, scientist, adviser, academic, spent, more, than, half, century, harvard, university, where, director, harvard, center, international, affairs, albert, weatherhe. Samuel Phillips Huntington April 18 1927 December 24 2008 was an American political scientist adviser and academic He spent more than half a century at Harvard University where he was director of Harvard s Center for International Affairs and the Albert J Weatherhead III University Professor Samuel P HuntingtonHuntington in 2004BornSamuel Phillips Huntington 1927 04 18 April 18 1927New York City U S DiedDecember 24 2008 2008 12 24 aged 81 Martha s Vineyard Massachusetts U S EducationYale University BA University of Chicago MA Harvard University PhD Political partyDemocraticSpouseNancy Arkelyan m 1957 wbr Academic backgroundThesisClientelism A Study in Administrative Politics 1951 InfluencesZbigniew BrzezinskiFeliks Koneczny 1 Academic workDisciplinePolitical scienceInternational relationsInstitutionsHarvard UniversityColumbia UniversityDoctoral studentsFareed Zakaria Stephen Peter Rosen Joel S Migdal Scott Sagan Aaron Friedberg Peter Feaver Eliot A Cohen Francis FukuyamaNotable worksPolitical Order in Changing Societies 1968 The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order 1996 Notable ideasClash of civilizationsforced draft urbanizationGreat Divergencepolitical decayInfluencedFrancis Fukuyama Kris Kobach 2 James Kurth John Mearsheimer Nawaf Obaid Amos Perlmutter cs Wang HuningDuring the presidency of Jimmy Carter Huntington was the White House Coordinator of Security Planning for the National Security Council Huntington is best known for his 1993 theory the Clash of Civilizations otherwise known as COC of a post Cold War new world order He argued that future wars would be fought not between countries but between cultures and that Islamic civilization would become the biggest threat to Western domination of the world Huntington is credited with helping to shape American views on civilian military relations political development and comparative government 3 According to the Open Syllabus Project Huntington is the second most frequently cited author on college syllabi for political science courses 4 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Academic career 3 Personal life 4 Notable arguments 4 1 The Soldier and the State 4 2 Political Order in Changing Societies 4 3 The Third Wave 4 4 The Clash of Civilizations 4 5 Who Are We and immigration 4 6 Other 5 National Academy of Sciences controversy 6 Selected publications 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and education editHuntington was born on April 18 1927 in New York City the son of Dorothy Sanborn nee Phillips a short story writer and Richard Thomas Huntington a publisher of hotel trade journals 5 6 His grandfather was publisher John Sanborn Phillips He graduated with distinction from Yale University at age 18 He served in the U S Army from April 1946 to May 1947 and was stationed at Fort Eustis Virginia 7 He then earned his master s degree from the University of Chicago and completed his PhD at Harvard University where he began teaching at age 23 8 3 Academic career editHuntington was a member of Harvard s department of government from 1950 until he was denied tenure in 1959 9 Along with Zbigniew Brzezinski who had also been denied tenure he moved to Columbia University in New York From 1959 to 1962 he was an associate professor of government at Columbia where he was also associate director of their Institute of War and Peace Studies 3 Huntington was invited to return to Harvard with tenure in 1963 and remained there until his death He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1965 10 Huntington and Warren Demian Manshel co founded and co edited Foreign Policy Huntington stayed as co editor until 1977 11 Huntington s first major book was The Soldier and the State The Theory and Politics of Civil Military Relations 1957 which was highly controversial when it was published but at present is regarded as the most influential book on American civil military relations 12 13 14 He became prominent with his Political Order in Changing Societies 1968 a work that challenged the conventional opinion of modernization theorists that economic and social progress would produce stable democracies in recently decolonized countries He also was co author of The Crisis of Democracy On the Governability of Democracies a report issued by the Trilateral Commission in 1976 In 1977 his friend Brzezinski who had been appointed National Security Adviser in the administration of Jimmy Carter invited Huntington to become White House Coordinator of Security Planning for the National Security Council He served in this position until the end of 1978 Huntington served as an instructor at MIT Seminar XXI 15 He continued to teach undergraduates until his retirement in 2007 Personal life editHuntington met his wife Nancy Arkelyan when they were working together on a speech for 1956 presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson They had two sons Nicholas and Timothy 3 After several years of declining health Huntington died on December 24 2008 at age 81 in Martha s Vineyard 5 Notable arguments editThe Soldier and the State edit Main article The Soldier and the State In The Soldier and the State The Theory and Politics of Civil Military Relations 1957 16 Huntington presents a general theory of civil military relations Huntington proposes a theory of objective civilian control according to which the optimal means of asserting control over the armed forces is to professionalize them Political Order in Changing Societies edit Main article Political Order in Changing Societies In 1968 just as the United States war in Vietnam was becoming most intense Huntington published Political Order in Changing Societies which was a critique of the modernization theory which had affected much US policy regarding the developing world during the prior decade Huntington argued that as societies modernize they become more complex and disordered If the process of social modernization that produces this disorder is not matched by a process of political and institutional modernization a process which produces political institutions capable of managing the stress of modernization the result may be violence During the 1970s Huntington was an advisor to governments both democratic and dictatorial During 1972 he met with Medici government representatives in Brazil a year later he published the report Approaches to Political Decompression warning against the risks of a too rapid political liberalization proposing gradual liberalization and a strong party state modeled upon the image of the Mexican Institutional Revolutionary Party After a prolonged transition Brazil became democratic during 1985 During the 1980s he became a valued adviser to the South African regime which used his ideas on political order to craft its total strategy to reform apartheid and suppress growing resistance He assured South Africa s rulers that increasing the repressive power of the state which at that time included police violence detention without trial and torture can be necessary to effect reform The reform process he told his South African audience often requires duplicity deceit faulty assumptions and purposeful blindness He thus gave his imprimatur to his hosts project of reforming apartheid rather than eliminating it 17 Huntington frequently cited Brazil as a success alluding to his role in his 1988 presidential address to the American Political Science Association commenting that political science played a modest role in this process Critics such as British political scientist Alan Hooper note that contemporary Brazil has an especially unstable party system wherein the best institutionalized party Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva s Workers Party emerged in opposition to controlled transition Moreover Hooper claims that the lack of civil participation in contemporary Brazil results from that top down process of political participation transitions The Third Wave edit Main article The Third Wave Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century In his 1991 book The Third Wave Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century Huntington made the argument that beginning with Portugal s revolution during 1974 there has been a third wave of democratization which describes a global trend which includes more than 60 countries throughout Europe Latin America Asia and Africa which have undergone some form of democratic transition Huntington won the 1992 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for this book 18 The Clash of Civilizations edit Further information Clash of Civilizations nbsp Map of the nine civilizations from Huntington s Clash of Civilizations In 1993 Huntington provoked great debate among international relations theorists with the interrogatively titled The Clash of Civilizations an influential oft cited article published in Foreign Affairs magazine In the article he argued that after the fall of the Soviet Union Islam would become the biggest obstacle to Western domination of the world The West s next big war therefore he said would inevitably be with Islam 19 Its description of post Cold War geopolitics and the inevitability of instability contrasted with the influential End of History thesis advocated by Francis Fukuyama Huntington expanded The Clash of Civilizations to book length and published it as The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order in 1996 The article and the book posit that post Cold War conflict would most frequently and violently occur because of cultural rather than ideological differences That whilst in the Cold War conflict occurred between the Capitalist West and the Communist Bloc East it now was most likely to occur between the world s major civilizations identifying seven and a possible eighth i Western ii Latin American iii Islamic iv Sinic Chinese v Hindu vi Orthodox vii Japanese and viii African This cultural organization contrasts the contemporary world with the classical notion of sovereign states To understand current and future conflict cultural rifts must be understood and culture rather than the State must be accepted as the reason for war Thus Western nations will lose predominance if they fail to recognize the irreconcilable nature of cultural tensions Huntington argued that this post Cold War shift in geopolitical organization and structure requires the West to strengthen itself culturally by abandoning the imposition of its ideal of democratic universalism and its incessant military interventionism Underscoring this point Huntington wrote in the 1996 expansion In the emerging world of ethnic conflict and civilizational clash Western belief in the universality of Western culture suffers three problems it is false it is immoral and it is dangerous 20 The identification of Western Civilization with Western Christianity Catholic Protestant was not Huntington s original idea it was rather the traditional Western opinion and subdivision before the Cold War era 21 Critics for example articles in Le Monde Diplomatique call The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order the theoretical legitimization of American caused Western aggression against China and the world s Islamic and Orthodox cultures Other critics argue that Huntington s taxonomy is simplistic and arbitrary and does not take account of the internal dynamics and partisan tensions within civilizations Furthermore critics argue that Huntington neglects ideological mobilization by elites and unfulfilled socioeconomic needs of the population as the real causal factors driving conflict that he ignores conflicts that do not fit well with the civilizational borders identified by him and they charge that his new paradigm is nothing but realist thinking in which states became replaced by civilizations 22 Huntington s influence upon US policy has been likened to that of historian Arnold Toynbee s controversial religious theories about Asian leaders during the early twentieth century The New York Times obituary on Huntington states that his emphasis on ancient religious empires as opposed to states or ethnicities as sources of global conflict gained more cachet after the Sept 11 attacks 23 Huntington wrote that Ukraine might divide along the cultural line between the more Catholic western Ukraine and Orthodox eastern Ukraine While a statist approach highlights the possibility of a Russian Ukrainian war a civilizational approach minimizes that and instead highlights the possibility of Ukraine splitting in half a separation which cultural factors would lead one to predict might be more violent than that of Czechoslovakia but far less bloody than that of Yugoslavia 24 Who Are We and immigration edit Main article Who Are We The Challenges to America s National Identity Huntington s last book Who Are We The Challenges to America s National Identity was published in May 2004 Its subject is the meaning of American national identity and what he describes as a cultural threat from large scale immigration by Latinos which Huntington says could divide the United States into two peoples two cultures and two languages In this book he called for America to force immigrants to adopt English and the US to turn to Protestant religions to save itself against the threats of Latino and Islamic immigrants In a book review for the academic journal Perspectives on Politics Gary M Segura Dean of the UCLA School of Public Affairs 25 asserted that the book should not be considered social science because of its divisive views and rhetoric 26 Segura also called Huntington s writing of the book unforgivable on account of Huntington s academic position saying that the work was a polemic rather than a work of scholarship 26 Other edit Huntington is credited with inventing the phrase Davos Man referring to global elites who have little need for national loyalty view national boundaries as obstacles that thankfully are vanishing and see national governments as residues from the past whose only useful function is to facilitate the elite s global operations The phrase refers to the World Economic Forum in Davos Switzerland where leaders of the global economy meet 27 National Academy of Sciences controversy editIn 1986 Huntington was nominated for membership to the National Academy of Sciences The nomination was opposed by Serge Lang a Yale University mathematician inspired by the writings of mathematician Neal Koblitz who had accused Huntington of misusing mathematics and engaging in pseudo science Lang claimed that Huntington distorted the historical record and used pseudo mathematics to make his conclusions seem convincing Lang s campaign succeeded Huntington was twice nominated and twice rejected A detailed description of these events was published by Lang in Academia Journalism and Politics A Case Study The Huntington Case which occupies the first 222 pages of his 1998 book Challenges 28 Huntington s prominence as a Harvard professor and director of Harvard s Center for International Affairs led to significant media coverage of his defeated nomination to the NAS including by The New York Times and The New Republic 29 30 His supporters included Herbert A Simon a 1978 laureate of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel Simon and Koblitz debated in multiple issues of Mathematical Intelligencer with other mathematicians joining in through Letters to the Editors column 31 32 33 34 35 Selected publications edit National Policy and the Transoceanic Navy United States Naval Institute Proceedings 80 5 May 1954 pages 483 493 online The Soldier and the State The Theory and Politics of Civil Military Relations 1957 The Common Defense Strategic Programs in National Politics 1961 Political Order in Changing Societies 1968 The Crisis of Democracy On the Governability of Democracies with Michel Crozier and Joji Watanuki 1976 Political Power USA USSR Similarities and contrasts Convergence or evolution with Zbigniew Brzezinski 1977 American Politics The Promise of Disharmony 1981 Democracy s third wave Journal of democracy 2 2 1991 pages 12 34 online Archived April 3 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Third Wave Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century 1991 The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order 1996 After twenty years the future of the third wave Journal of democracy 8 4 1997 pages 3 12 online Who Are We The Challenges to America s National Identity 2004 based on the article The Hispanic Challenge Foreign Policy March April 2004As editor Culture Matters How Values Shape Human Progress with Lawrence E Harrison 2000 Many Globalizations Cultural Diversity in the Contemporary World with Peter L Berger 2002 See also editClash of civilizations Civil military relations Historical institutionalism Historical sociology Intermediate Region International relations theory Modernization theory New institutionalism Political geography Western civilizationReferences edit Bilinski P Feliks Karol Koneczny Droga Kariery Akademickiej in Polish English summary PubMed Kwart Hist Nauki Tech Smith Michael A Anderson Kevin Rackaway Chapman 2015 State Voting Laws in America Historical Statutes and Their Modern Implications New York Palgrave Macmillan p 73 doi 10 1057 9781137483584 ISBN 978 1 137 48358 4 a b c d Lewin Tamar December 28 2008 Samuel P Huntington 81 Political Scientist Is Dead The New York Times Retrieved June 9 2015 Open Syllabus Project Retrieved November 5 2023 a b Hart Dan December 27 2008 Samuel Huntington Harvard Political Scientist Dies Bloomberg News POINTER Journals 2009 Volume 35 Number 1 Featured Author Samuel P Huntington Mindef gov sg Retrieved August 17 2012 Index Record for Samuel Huntington 1927 US Veterans Affairs Beneficiary Identification Records Locator Subsystem Death File 1850 2010 Fold3 by Ancestry com website Retrieved November 30 2023 Enlistment Date is listed as 17 Apr 1946 and Release Date is listed as 11 May 1947 Samuel Huntington Albert J Weatherhead III University Professor Department of Government Harvard University Archived from the original on April 30 2008 Retrieved December 27 2008 Professor Samuel Huntington author of The Clash of Civilizations The Times London December 29 2008 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter H PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved April 22 2011 Samuel Huntington 81 political scientist scholar Harvard Gazette News harvard edu February 5 2009 Retrieved August 17 2012 Michael C Desch 1998 Soldiers States and Structures The End of the Cold War and Weakening U S Civilian Control Armed Forces amp Society 24 3 pages 389 405 Michael C Desch 2001 Civilian Control of the Military The Changing Security Environment Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press Peter D Feaver 1996 An American Crisis in Civilian Control and Civil Military Relations The Tocqueville Review 17 1 159 Art Robert September 1 2015 From the Director September 2015 MIT Seminar XXI Massachusetts Institute of Technology Samuel P Huntington The Soldier And The State the Theory And Politics Of Civil Military Relations Belknap Press 1957 via Internet Archive Joseph Lelyveld Move Your Shadow New York 1985 pages 68 69 Shula Marks and Stanley Trapido South Africa Since 1976 an historical perspective in Shaun Johnson ed South Africa No Turning Back London 1988 pages 28 29 1992 Samuel Huntington Herman Daly and John Cobb Archived from the original on December 2 2013 Haruna Mohammed September 26 2001 Nigeria September 11 And Huntington s Prophecy Daily Trust A Guide to the Work of Samuel Huntington contemporarythinkers org Peter Harrison An Eccentric Tradition The Paradox of Western Values see Richard E Rubenstein and Jarle Crocker 1994 Challenging Huntington in Foreign Policy Number 96 Autumn 1994 pages 113 28 Samuel P Huntington of Harvard Dies at 81 The New York Times December 27 2008 Testing Huntington in Ukraine European Tribune Gary Segura Dean UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs September 4 2019 a b Segura Gary M 2005 Who Are We The Challenges to America s National Identity Perspectives on Politics 3 03 doi 10 1017 S1537592705460259 S2CID 143248422 Davos man s death wish The Guardian 3 February 2006 Lang Serge 1999 Challenges New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 94861 4 Boffey Philip M April 29 1987 Prominent Harvard Scholar Barred by Science Academy The New York Times section A page 1 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved October 20 2023 Zakaria Fareed July 27 1987 Blood lust in academia The professor s vendetta The New Republic Vol 197 no 4 pp 16 18 Koblitz Neal December 1 1988 A tale of three equations or the emperors have no clothes The Mathematical Intelligencer 10 1 4 10 doi 10 1007 BF03023843 ISSN 0343 6993 S2CID 121312716 Koblitz Neal December 1 1988 Reply to unclad emperors The Mathematical Intelligencer 10 1 14 16 doi 10 1007 BF03023845 ISSN 0343 6993 S2CID 123030288 Simon Herbert A Koblitz Neal March 1 1988 Opinion The Mathematical Intelligencer 10 2 10 12 doi 10 1007 BF03028350 ISSN 0343 6993 Simon Herbert A December 1 1988 Unclad emperors A case of mistaken identity The Mathematical Intelligencer 10 1 11 14 doi 10 1007 BF03023844 ISSN 0343 6993 S2CID 123171596 Aubert Karl Egil Todorov Audrey Lazarus Andrew J Simon Herbert A Akin Ethan Koblitz Neal September 1 1988 Letters to the editor The Mathematical Intelligencer 10 4 3 6 doi 10 1007 BF03023736 ISSN 0343 6993 S2CID 189886367 Further reading editMeaney Thomas The Return of The West New York Times March 11 2022 Interview by Richard Snyder Samuel P Huntington Order and Conflict in Global Perspective pages 210 233 in Gerardo L Munck and Richard Snyder Passion Craft and Method in Comparative Politics Baltimore Maryland The Johns Hopkins University Press 2007 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Samuel P Huntington nbsp Look up Huntingtonianism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Samuel Huntington explaining himself his book and thesis about the clash of civilization in a 1997 interview with Charlie Rose Archived April 2 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Crisis of Democracy Archived August 21 2019 at the Wayback Machine Trilateral Commission report Appearances on C SPAN Sam Huntington discusses Who Are We The Challenges to America s National Identity with Jenny Attiyeh on Thoughtcast Interview with Sam Huntington by Amina R Chaudary a 2006 interview with Islamica Magazine Samuel Huntington Ideas Have Consequences by James Kurth Samuel Huntington a prophet for the Trump era by Carlos Lozada The Washington Post July 18 2017Academic officesNew office Albert J Weatherhead III University Professor Succeeded byGary KingProfessional and academic associationsPreceded byAaron Wildavsky President of the AmericanPolitical Science Association1986 1987 Succeeded byKenneth WaltzAwardsPreceded byWorld Commission onEnvironment and Development Grawemeyer Award forIdeas Improving World Order1992 With John B Cobb and Herman Daly Succeeded byDonald Akenson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Samuel P Huntington amp oldid 1201645416, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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