Anglos and Mexicans
In the
Twenty First Century

By

David Montejano
The University of Texas at Austin

Occasional Paper No. 3

August 1992

 

Dr. Montejano explores the implications of the United States' declining place in the capitalist world-system for the recently achieved political accommodation between Chicano middle class politicians and the Anglo business and political establishment in the Southwest. Will a possible future of economic stagnation bring with it a renewal of the ethnic/class conflict and repression that characterized Anglo-Mexican relations in the decades before WWII? Or will enlightened leadership from the Anglo and Mexican American communities work out mutually beneficial policies to prevent the growth of a Chicano underclass? These two scenarios are discussed by Dr. Montejano. This is a revised version of a paper presented on November 6, 1989, for the Institute's colloquia series at Michigan State University.

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