Abstract
In a country built on the massive arrival of non native peoples for 400 years, ethnicity has become an essential element of the American identity. Unlike most European democracies, the American political system allows for the representation of these ethnic minorities through lobbying, as authorized and facilitated by the Constitution. Lobbying is essentially an American democratic exercise. To be competitive, ethnic groups have no other choice but to master the rules of the democratic game. In the end, the groups that are the most assimilated, thriving, ideologically close to the average Americans are the most likely to be efficient. In spite of frequent critics of interest groups, both the American public and American politicians remain fond of this system, which, for the former, allows them to voice their opinion, and for the latter, is a source of financial contributions and new ideas.
AFRI 2007 Summary
AFRI 2007, volume VIII - Ethnic interest groups in the United States after 9/11 : legal and legitimate ?
par - 18 mars 2008Sur le même thème
-
Etats-Unis
- Penser la stratégie américaine de la sécurité du territoire national -
- Le crime d’agression : une définition sans rime ni raison. Une approche américaine -
- Le rejet du Traité d’interdiction complète des essais nucléaires par le Sénat américain : Un revers pour l’Arms Control nucléaire ? -
- Le Groenland : entre contraintes géographiques et vertus stratégiques -
- Minorités




Version imprimable