Lexington Books
Pages: 604
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-9735-6 • Hardback • January 2015 • $198.00 • (£154.00)
978-1-4985-0098-2 • Paperback • January 2015 • $83.99 • (£65.00)
978-0-7391-9736-3 • eBook • January 2015 • $79.50 • (£61.00)
Armando Navarro is a political scientist and professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, Riverside.
Introduction: Mexicano/Latino Politics: Their Quest for Self-Determination in the Twenty-First Century
Part I: Justification for APNWN and APS
Chapter One: Mexicanos Political Experience in Aztlán: A Historical Narrative of a Conquered, Occupied, and Colonized People
Chapter Two: Re-Mexicanización of Aztlán and Latinoiziación or “Browning” of the United States
Chapter Three: Mexicanos and Latinos in the United States in the Twenty-First Century: Under a State of Siege and State of Crisis
Chapter Four: Profile of Internal Colonial Mexicano/Latino Politics: A People in a Leadership, Organizational, and Electoral Crisis
Chapter Five: 2013 Latino Immigration Reform Debacle
Chapter Six: Triad Crisis: Country, World, and Global Capitalism in Turmoil
Part Two: Alternative Models for Change
Chapter Seven: Aztlán’s Politics of a Nation-Within-a-Nation: Quest for Self-Determination and Reform
Chapter Eight: Global Secessionist Contagion: The Politics of Separatism
Chapter Nine: Aztlán’s Mexicano Historical Antecedents of Separatism: Struggles for Self-Determination
Chapter Ten: Aztlán’s Politics of Separatism: A New Nation-State or Re-Annexation to México?
Epilogue
Navarro describes this 577-page tome as a 'consequence of forty-six years of activism and forty-some years of scholarship.' The raison d’etre for the book is to answer the question of what needs to be done in the struggle for self-determination in Aztlan, the land that Mexico lost to the US as a result of the 1846–48 Mexican-American War. The intended audiences are Mexicanos and other Latinos who reside today in the region of Aztlan, or what is now known as the American Southwest, home to descendants of Mexicanos who are now an occupied and internally colonized people. Two change models are proposed: Aztlan’s Politics of a Nation-Within-a-Nation (APNWN) and Aztlan’s Politics of Separatism (APS). These models can be applied to any global secessionist struggle (i.e., Palestinians and Kurds). Navarro provides a rich historical analysis spanning the Aztecs to contemporary US foreign policy. The book is recommended for historians and political scientists; the extensive bibliography and endnotes indicate that the book is well researched. Navarro hopes that this accessible, engaging, and challenging book serves as a catalyst for dialogue and action. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate, graduate, and research collections.
— Choice Reviews
Armando Navarro is one of the foremost activist scholars in the Chicana/o community. He is one of the few scholars who know what is to be done to correct the imperfections of a society that prevents Latinos access to education and the political power that is necessary to obtain the human rights we take for granted. As in his previous works, Navarro draws a bight line under the problems and what is to be done, presenting two change models: (1) one examining the Chicano national question; Aztlán’s Politics of a Nation-Within-a-Nation (APNWN); and (2) “Aztlán’s Politics of Separatism” in which he puts the struggle into a historical context. Rodolfo Acuña, California State University, Northridge
— Rodolfo Acuña, California State University, Northridge
In the tradition of activists scholars like Ernesto Galarza and Rodolfo Acuna, Professor Armando Navarro produces yet another provocative and timely manuscript on Chicano/Latino politics. This work is not the usual analysis of voter registration rates and vote turnout statistics since the Viva Kennedy Clubs emerged in 1960. Instead, this book is about the future; boldly stated in two models he projects may be the practical scenarios within a couple of decades. Not one to be timid or cautious in making a prognosis, Dr. Navarro presents the reader with thought-provoking models of what could be in a clear style, extensively documented, and engaging critical analyses. What remains is who will read and apply these models? Jose Angel Gutierrez, University of Texas at Arlington, Founder of La Raza Unida Party
— Jose Angel Gutierrez, University of Texas at Arlington, Founder of La Raza Unida Party
Navarro’s work encompasses a critical analysis of Mexicano/Chicano living histories and personifies the spirit of continued struggle against colonization. Interweaving political history, demography, and socio economic history and conditions, Navarro takes to task the current political state of Raza in the twenty-first century. He spurs you to examine his supposition that as Raza we are an “occupied and internal colonized people.” Yet his writings insist that our communities rethink politics and dare to fashion a model essential to understanding and practicing politics as a means for liberation. His clarity of purpose and political vision is critical to attaining human rights and political self-determination against all odds.
— Nita J. Gonzales, President of Escuela Tlatelolco Centro de Estudios
'The truth and only the truth will set you free.' Armando Navarro’s latest book documents the Chicano Movement’s historical struggle for self-determination in the United States. Navarro, in his historical documented analysis, lays out for Chicanos, this nation’s fastest growing ethnic group, brutal political truths. Navarro’s book is a must read for those who believe in the principle of self-determination, and continue the historical struggle to attain social, economic, and political power for Chicanos in Aztlán.
— Herman Baca, President of Committee on Chicano Rights