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Samuel Huntington

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Samuel Huntington The Clash of Civilizations The context Who is Samuel Huntington? What prompted him to write Clash of Civilizations What has he done since? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Samuel Huntington


1
Samuel Huntington
  • The Clash of Civilizations

2
The context
  • Who is Samuel Huntington?
  • What prompted him to write Clash of
    Civilizations
  • What has he done since?

3
The Hypothesis
  1. World politics is entering a new phase in the
    wake of the end of the Cold War
  2. The fundamental source of conflict in this new
    world will not be primarily ideological or
    primarily economic. The great divisions among
    humankind and the dominating source of conflict
    will be cultural.

4
Conflict in Modern History
  • Conflict in the modern era, for Huntington, has
    been largely a sequence of
  • conflicts between princes (what we will study as
    the Westphalian system), then
  • conflicts between nation-states (after the French
    revolution), then
  • conflicts between ideologies (during the Cold
    War)

5
Underlying Assumptions
  • Huntington is reproducing what we might call a
    neo-Hegelian view of history (history as
    unfolding through conflict)
  • Assumes that the end of the Cold War is a
    defining moment in history, a tipping point
  • Assumes that civilizations are fairly fixed over
    time

6
The Contemporary Era
  • For Huntington, this means that international
    politics, hitherto, was in a western phase
    non-western civilizations were the objects of
    history, the targets of western colonialism. In
    the post-Cold War, they join the West as the
    movers and shapers of history.

7
Civilizations and History
  • In this view, contemporary civilizations
    represent the product of a long process of
    identity formation
  • It is the incompatability between these core
    values that will produce inevitable conflict
    between different civilizations
  • While from a contemporary perspective this may
    seem like a new phenomenon, it is actually a
    reversion to a previous period of history
  • Read in this fashion, the clash of
    civilizations represents the closing of a
    parenthesis in world history.

8
What is a Civilization?
  • Three attributes objective, subjective, and
    dynamic.
  • Objective elements include language, history,
    religion, customs, institutions
  • Subjective elements include variable levels of
    self-identification
  • Civilizations are dynamic they rise and fall,
    divide and merge

9
Why will civilizations clash?
  1. Differences between civilizations are more
    fundamental and enduring than ideological or
    political differences.
  2. Interactions between civilizations are
    increasing.
  3. Economic modernization and social change are
    separating people from longstanding identities
    they weaken the nation-state as a source of
    identity.
  4. The rest of the world is increasingly willing to
    define itself in non-Western ways.

10
(continued)
  1. Cultural characteristics are less mutable and
    less easily compromised than political and
    economic ones.
  2. Economic regionalism is increasing, which will
    increase civilization consciousness. Common
    culture, Huntington argues, may be a prerequisite
    for economic integration.

11
The Two Levels of the Clash
  • At the micro level, groups clash along the fault
    lines of adjacent civilizations
  • At the macro level, states from different
    civilizations compete for political and economic
    power.

12
The kin-country syndrome
  • Groups or states becoming involved in a war with
    groups or states from another civilization will
    attempt to rally other groups or states from
    their own civilization behind their cause.
  • Examples may be, the Gulf War, the former Soviet
    Union in the Caucasus, and Yugoslavia.

13
The West versus the Rest?
  • Talk of the world community and the free
    world is, according to Huntington, a thin veneer
    for the domination of global affairs by western
    interests.
  • The West sees its values as universalist (meaning
    that they are applicable to everyone,
    irrespective of civilization). International
    institutions based on these values are merely
    tools for maintaining and promoting western
    values and domination.

14
Torn countries?
  • Some countries are torn over which civilization
    their country belongs to (Russia, Mexico,
    Turkey). They can redefine their identity on
    three conditions
  • A supportive elite
  • Acquiescent masses
  • Willingness from the dominant civilization

15
The Biggest Challenge to the West?
  • The biggest challenge to the West will come from
    an emerging Confucian-Islamic connection,
    primarily concentrated around the asserted right
    to develop and deploy NBC weapons (counter to the
    western value of non-proliferation).

16
Implications
  • Nation-states may not disappear, singular
    civilizations will not become the norm. But
  • civilization-consciousness is increasing and will
    become the dominant source of conflict
  • The west will need to strengthen its own
    civilization to meet the challenge
  • The West will need to better understand other
    civilizations and seek to define areas of
    potential co-existence

17
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