Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Cultural Diversity In Local Politics Essays -- essays research papers
 Cultural Diversity in Local Politics      Overview    This paper explores the limits and potentials of ethnic and racial coalition  building in Los Angeles. The demographic changes that have occurred in Los  Angeles during the past twenty years have been extraordinary, both in scope and  diversity.    The area has witnessed a literal boom in population growth, increasing from 7  million in 1970 to 8.8 million in 1990. (US Bureau of the Census) However, it is  the dramatic change in ethnic and racial diversity of the population which has  caught most observers attention.    Los Angeles has taken on a new form in terms of its racial diversity, moving  from a biracial to a multiethnic setting. The non-Hispanic White population has  declined from its 71 percent share in 1970 to a narrow numerical plurality of 41  percent of the county's population in 1990.    Meanwhile, the Latino and Asian Pacific population witnessed a doubling -- from  15% to 39% -- and near quadrupling ââ¬â from 3% to 11% of their population shares  respectively. Meanwhile, African Americans, while slightly growing numerically,  were a constant share of the county population (11%) during this period. (Oliver  and Johnson:57-94) Thus, on the eve of the twenty-first century, Los Angeles  has one of the most ethnically diverse populations of any metropolitan area in  the country.    What does this ethnic diversity mean for multiethnic coalition building in the  politics of Los Angeles County? Does the changing demography increase the  opportunity for ethnic cooperation? Or, has the ethnic changes increased rather  than decreased the prospects of interethnic conflict?    Introduction    After the 1992 riots, a clarion call was issued from all corners for the  emerging multiethnic majority to take its rightful place in the politics and  leadership of the city. A multiethnic coalition, it ws suggested, could lead the  city to a new multicultural future.    This call was clearly built on the assumption that three divers groups ââ¬â African  Americans, Asian Pacific Islanders and Latinos ââ¬â could come together and pursue  a coalition built on their common interests.    But what do we do know about the prospects of multiethnic coalitions? There is  voluminous literature on urban politics. However, this literature has been  shaped principally by the question of racial politics. (Browning, Marshall and  Tabb) That is, how have traditional urban politics,...              ... California Press, 1984).    Carmichael, Stokely, and Charles V. Hamilton, Black Power (New York: Vintage  Books, 1967).    Horton, John. "The Politics of Ethnic Change: Grass Roots Responses to Economic  and Demographic Restructuring in Monterey Park, California," Urban Geography  10:6 (1989): 578-592.    LASUI (Los Angeles Survey of Inequality) Focus Group Interviews, 1992.    Oliver, Melvin L., and James H. Johnson, Jr., "Interethnic Conflict in an Urban  Ghetto: The Case of Blacks and Latinos in Los Angeles," Research in Social  Movements, Conflict, and Change 6 (1984): 57-94; US Bureau of the Census.. op.  cit.    Oliver and Johnson, see above; Also by Oliver and Johnson, "Interethnic  Minority Conflict in Urban America: The Effects of Economic and Social  Dislocations," Urban Geography 10 (1989): 449-463.    Ramos, George and Tracy Wilkinson, "Unrest Widens Rifts in Latino Population,"  Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1992.    Sonenshein, Rafael J., Politics in Black and White: Race and Power in Los  Angeles (Princeton: NJ: Princeton University Press, 1993).    US Bureau of the Census, Census of Population and Housing. (Washington, DC: US  Bureau of the Census, 1970).                       
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