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Chapter 1 – The Struggle for Texas: Demographics, Culture, and Political Power

Chapter 1 – The Struggle for Texas: Demographics, Culture, and Political Power. Learning Objectives. 1.1 Describe the settlement history of Texas 1.2 Assess the impact industries have made to the Texas economy from 1860 to today

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Chapter 1 – The Struggle for Texas: Demographics, Culture, and Political Power

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  1. Chapter 1 – The Struggle for Texas: Demographics, Culture, and Political Power

  2. Learning Objectives 1.1 Describe the settlement history of Texas 1.2 Assess the impact industries have made to the Texas economy from 1860 to today 1.3 Analyze how the changing demographics of the state affect government 1.4 Examine the source and impact of political culture in Texas

  3. The Origins of Texas • Native Americans • Arrived 10,000 before Europeans • Competed or land • Disease and conflict with European settlers diminished population • Spanish Settlers • Glory, God, and Gold • Established missions and military posts • Protect against French settlers in Louisiana

  4. The Origins of Texas • Tejanos • Mexican Texans • Worked in ranching communities • Embraced ayuniamiento (local self-government) • Anglos • Settlers from United States • Empresarios granted the right to settle new land • American settlers • Immigration stopped 1830

  5. The Origins of Texas • Tejanos and Anglos • Friction immediately • Both demanded independence • Tejanos lacked direct representation after revolution • African-Americans • Brought to Texas as “contract labor” • Population rose from 5,000 to over 38,000 after independence • Slave codes before and after Civil War • Freedmantowns heart of community

  6. Continuity and Change in the Texas Economy • Economy ranked twelfth in the world • Home to six of the top fifty companies in Fortune 500 • Gross State Product second highest in the United States • Balanced economy sustains stable growth • Diverse industry • 1980s • Dependent on natural resources • Oil and gas • Created the “Big Rich” • Oil prices dropped economic diversity promoted

  7. Continuity and Change in the Texas Economy • Food and Fiber (agriculture) • Fuel (oil) • King Cattle (Texas beef) • Manufacturing (second only to California) • Military and Defense Industries (fifteen military bases) • High Tech (“Silicon Hills” in Austin) • Healthcare (Texas Medical Center) • Recreation and Retirement (tops $70 billion)

  8. Continuity and Change in the Texas Economy • “Texas Miracle” • 2001-2008 • Jobs grew by two million • Gross domestic product grew to over $1 trillion • Oil and Price propping up Texas • Oil price fell unemployment rose • Economic strain felt • Not all groups experience “Texas Miracle” the same • Fifth from the top in income inequality

  9. Continuity and Change in The Texas Demographics • State Population Growth • Urbanization • Suburbanization • Implications of Population Shifts • Challenges of Population Growth • Infrastructure • Water Use • Health Care • Energy Use

  10. Continuity and Change in The Texas Demographics • Racial and Ethnic Trends in Texas • Segregation • Challenges of Shifting Racial and Ethnic Trends • Education • Housing • An Aging State and its Challenges • Income Security • Medicaid • Safety

  11. Continuity and Change in Texas Political Culture • Individualistic Political Culture • Personal achievement • Individual freedom • Individual Enterprise • Loyalty to self • Government accountable for protection of basic rights • Minimal government • Distrust of Government • Trust in the Free Market

  12. Continuity and Change in Texas Political Culture • Traditionalistic Political Culture • Priority on enforcement of law and order • Support existing institutions • Church • Traditional family • Texas on the line between Individualistic and Traditionalist Political Culture

  13. Continuity and Change in Texas Political Culture • Culture Conflicts • College Funding • Government should maintain equal playing field • College education critical to individual advancement and building skilled workforce • College is expensive and all groups should receive opportunity • Morals and Money • Taxes kept low (individualistic value) • Some activities should be prohibited • Gambling • Illicit drugs

  14. Texas Takeaways • Texas was first settled by Native Americans battling for territory and being pushed by other tribes and pulled by the roaming buffalo, then by the Spanish explorers looking for an expanded empire, then by the Mexican government anxious to provide a buffer between them and the United States. • Texans revolted against Mexico because of anger over halted Anglo immigration, few legal rights, higher taxation, and a general sense of self-sufficiency • If Texas were an independent nation, its economy would be ranked 12th in the world. Its 2014 gross state product (the sum of all goods and service produced in a state) topped $1.7 trillion, the second highest in the United States

  15. Texas Takeaways • The Texas economy has gone through several boom and bust cycles-first cotton and cattle, then energy (primarily oil), then manufacturing, then (again) energy (natural gas especially • The “Texas Miracle” is what some have called the Texas economy from 2001 to 2008, which experienced a major boom: low unemployment, low inflation, and growing state coffers. The economy was not rosy for everyone, however, as many jobs were low income and many residents lacked access to health care • Texas had the largest increase in population (more than 4 million people) of any state in the union. Even other large states like California and Florida did not add population as rapidly as Texas between 2000 and 2010

  16. Texas Takeaways • Texas’s recent population growth is younger, more Hispanic, and more urban not than in the past 10 years • Pressure is on the state to educate a diverse population, a strain on state health funds for aging Texans, protecting equal opportunity housing, and ensuring racial tolerance are all challenges the state faces as the demographics change • Political culture in Texas, according to political scientist Daniel Elazar’s analysis, involves two primary value dimensions: individualistic and traditionalistic • Texans are religious, favor minimal government, approve of the free market, and embrace law and order. These values shape political beliefs on several issues like abortion, state spending, and illegal drugs

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