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      • Four decades later, Lewis’s clash between civilizations had become a clash of civilizations. This was the claim of Samuel Huntington, who contended that a clash between the West and the ‘Muslim world’ would be the key foreign policy issue for the US (and the West more generally) after the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union.
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  2. Oct 19, 2023 · Huntington clarified that he wasnt eager to see a clash of civilizationshe advised Western policymakers to be cognizant of the tremendous sensitivities around cultural issues so...

  3. Huntington's thesis of civilizational clash. Huntington at the 2004 World Economic Forum. Huntington argues that the trends of global conflict after the end of the Cold War are increasingly appearing at these civilizational divisions.

    • Samuel P. Huntington
    • 1996
  4. May 1, 2018 · In 1993, the late Samuel Huntington published one of the most cited articles in international relations literature: ‘The Clash of Civilizations?’ (Foreign Affairs, Summer 1993, pp. 22–48), followed three years later by a book-length treatment of the same issue.

  5. Sep 3, 2013 · It was 20 years ago that Samuel Huntington's essay on what he termed "the clash of civilizations" was first published in the journal Foreign Affairs. The essay predicted the next frontier of...

  6. Nov 13, 2023 · This article takes a retrospective look at the controversial “clash-of-civilizations” thesis articulated by Samuel Huntington in the early 1990s. In some respects, the “pearl anniversary” of the thesis reveals it to have stood up reasonably well.

  7. Nov 28, 2018 · To back up his argument, Huntington points to the fact that there are many conflicts on the borders between civilizations: The former Yugoslavia between Orthodox Christian and Muslim civilizations. In the Middle East between Judaism, Islam and Western Christianity.

  8. Feb 20, 2019 · In the three decades since Huntington first aired his controversial framework, inter-civilizational “clash” and “dialogue” have become mainstream issues in both international relations and in many countries’ domestic concerns.

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