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Kristian Ramos

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Where are the Next Generation of Hispanic Leaders?

Posted: 07/11/2012 10:25 am

Not too long ago the Pew Hispanic Center released a survey which posed a simple question: does the Latino community have a national leader? In 2010 that answer was a resounding no. When asked in an open-ended question to name the person they consider "the most important Latino leader in the country today," nearly two-thirds (64%) of Hispanic respondents said they did not know. An additional 10% said "no one." While there is not a more recent survey, it is a safe bet that if the same question was posed to most Hispanics today they would respond similarly.

At this point it is a cliché to note that the Hispanic community in the United States will double in size over the next 40 years, it also widely accepted that Hispanics will comprise more than 30% of the United States population by 2050. Given how much the Hispanic population is set to grow, there is nowhere near that level of representation in our political system. There are 31 Hispanic's serving in the 112th Congress, 5.7% of the total membership. Twenty-nine serve in the House and two in the Senate. There are only two Hispanic Governors in the entire country in Brian Sandoval from Nevada and Susana Martinez from New Mexico. The representation of the current crop of Hispanics is commendable; no one would say otherwise. However the broader question before anyone reading this is where will the next generation of Hispanic leaders come from?

While being a leader is not limited to political service, it sometimes feels as if there is a void in developing the next generation of Hispanic Leaders. That is where the Latino Leadership Initiative (LLI) at Harvard's Center for Public Leadership comes in. It asks a very simple question of its participants: what is a leader, how does society create leaders. Perhaps most significantly on the question of what constitutes a "leader," the initiative puts the emphasis on the community.

Dario E. Collado, Program Manager of the initiative, puts it this way: "The most significant learning that we have seen while building and working on the LLI is that our community, the Latino community, and those that want to have it prosper and succeed really do care about the well being, outcome and importance of helping to build leadership capacity for the betterment of everyone."

All of the students participating in the program are confronted by this simple question, what is a leader? For those who have gone through the process that includes not only the Hispanic community's best and brightest but also those looking for a second chance at being leaders in their communities. This includes people like Channel Baez, a teen mother who graduated with her high school diploma in the summer of 2002 and gave birth to her daughter that September. Since, June of 2010 110 students have gone through this program. Baez is just one of these Hispanic undergraduates who has demonstrated enough interest in serving their community and the country as a whole to be given a spot at LLI.

According to Collado, giving those in the community the tools to be leaders in whatever endeavors they pursue after they leave Harvard is among the most important functions of the program. Ostensibly the programs objectives are to enhance the leadership capacity and understanding of students committed to serving the Hispanic community and the country as a whole. But the program is also about so much more than that, it is about giving back and growing the infrastructure of a larger Hispanic leadership apparatus nationally.

So back to that thorny question about how to foster greater national Hispanic leadership, perhaps the Latino Leadership Initiative has the answer, start in the community. The Latino Leadership Initiative is important, fostering more national leadership among Hispanics is important, but at the end of the day that journey starts in the community. The investment in that, the work and toil at the end of the day is the stuff that leadership is made of.

 

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Not too long ago the Pew Hispanic Center released a survey which posed a simple question: does the Latino community have a national leader? In 2010 that answer was a resounding no. When asked in an o...
Not too long ago the Pew Hispanic Center released a survey which posed a simple question: does the Latino community have a national leader? In 2010 that answer was a resounding no. When asked in an o...
 
 
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11:02 PM on 09/08/2012
"Hispanic" and "Latino" are defined by the US government and are, therefore, political labels. The population in the United States labeled as such are no different than anyone not labeled "Hispanic" or "Latino." They come in white, black, Asian (near east and far east), Native American and mixed, so nothing in the definition of these two labels has anything to do with race or biological ethnic classifications. If one, therefore, is to champion the fostering of greater national Hispanic leadership, one must champion that those skills necessary to mold leaders from the population labeled Hispanic and Latino are the same as the skills necessary to mold leaders from the entire American population not labeled Hispanic and Latino.

Above all else, to lead is to do. To do with integrity, honor, veracity, conviction, intrinsically motivated, and grounded; do that way and others will follow. The United States is founded in the belief that it is the individual that matters whatever is his or her background, and that everyone has the right to equal: treatment, respect, protection, and expression of opinion. In short, the individual, as an individual, has the dignified right to be equal to any other individual. To be sure, the understanding of this plants the seed toward leadership.
11:37 AM on 07/16/2012
The issue is that there is a larger need today for our services and programs due to our growing numbers than when CHCI’s visionary founders in 1978 saw the lack of representation on Capitol Hill and launched our organization.

While identifying a national leader in the Latino community is debated, of more importance at the grass roots level is to ensure that we have capable and prepared leaders serving in all sectors of our society and proudly representing the Latino community when critical decisions are made that impact our future and the future of America. The Latino community is not monolithic and finding that one leader capable of representing us all is far less important than having Latino leadership in our local communities as business owners, doctors, lawyers, judges, elected officials, neighbors, teachers, and successful students. Experience has taught us that leadership is the element that transcends all cultural, social, and economic backgrounds and redefines what it means to be a dreamer. When you ask the question “Where will the next generation of Hispanic leaders come from?” at CHCI we say it takes leaders to develop leaders. We praise the Latino Leadership Initiative at Harvard for its work and for joining us in our tireless efforts to develop the next generation of Latino leaders.
11:34 AM on 07/16/2012
The Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI) salutes the Latino Leadership Institute at Harvard for joining our ranks in developing Latino leaders. While identifying a national leader may be a challenge for many in the Latino community, CHCI has been at the forefront of developing the next generation of Latino leaders since 1978. This year we celebrate 35 years of impact and our founders’ vision of educated, engaged, and united Latinos leading in all sectors of U.S. society and business. Through our nationally-recognized and award-winning internship and fellowship programs, we have prepared thousands of talented young Latinos to become the future leaders of the nation by providing real-world experience in Washington, D.C., and an intensive professional and leadership development curriculum that will benefit them in any career path they choose. Our leadership formula is grounded on education, opportunity, access, and civic engagement. This leadership formula has been proven and today we have more than 7,000 alumni and many serve in elected office, in the Administration, in high level roles on Capitol Hill, and many other leadership roles around the country including in Fortune 100 companies. We continue to strive to meet the dramatically increasing need for leadership in our community and have grown from serving less than 50 young Latinos in 1998 to nearly 1,700 in 2011. CHCI is proof there is no void in developing Hispanic leaders nor do we lack a leadership development model that works. More below....
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
08:29 PM on 07/15/2012
In the outlying cities around LA there have been so many corruption issues lately. Everything from people taking bribes to council members having illicit affairs. So, I guess California REALLY IS Mexico North now.
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
10:40 AM on 07/18/2012
...only thing left to "import" from that cultural sewer is the decapitation of 12 y/o virgins in the Taco Bell parking let at midnight on Dia De Los Tuertos"
08:52 AM on 07/14/2012
Good point but the City University of New York and have a Leadership Institute effort as well. Lets not engage in the view that only Harvard can produce leaders. Cesar Chavez, Antonia Pantoja and countless other leaders that have championed the rights of the Latino community did not go to Harvard. On the contrary sometimes connection to these institution give people an "inflated sense" of their own imporance. Robbing them of the most important quality of leadership-humility.
03:23 PM on 07/12/2012
In my neighborhood, it's Gloria Molina she's done a lot of great things for East LA. There used to be Nick Pacheco in Boyle Heights, but I think he moved to the valley. As a Latina, I can't really say I know of many, maybe except for my parents but they've passed on. Wow! Great article...makes you think.
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edejan
03:47 AM on 07/12/2012
It appears only people who write hateful things about Latino topics are published in this section. As a Latina, my comments are routinely scrubbed while those expressing contempt for us are published with glee.
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
08:47 AM on 07/16/2012
who dat?
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edejan
03:30 AM on 07/12/2012
Maybe the next generation of Latino leaders are going to be like the next generation of Irish leaders were fifty years ago...blending into the "melting pot." My father's generation had definite leaders and heroes, including Castro, Che Guevara, Bauttista, Peron and others. But I don't know of any renowned, high profile Latino leaders during my lifetime, except maybe Luis Gutierrez...because I'm from Chicago. My father dreamt of the "reconquesta" but I can barely speak Spanish. So maybe that's a good thing?
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
08:51 AM on 07/16/2012
Heros? Hmmmmmm.
Let's look at this:
1. Castro enslaved an entire country and then installed his brother as Monarch-In-Chief...oh yeah that so democratic and such inspired leadership.
2. Che Guevara abandoned his wife and kids and told her to have a good life and to be sure to feed the kids while he was rolling around in the jungle with is commando buddies...hmmmm
3. Bauttista (sp?) robbed the coffers of Cuba to buy mansions all over the world and get lots of plastic surgery to erase his black roots, like Sammy Sosa today
4. Peron...he put his prostitute girlfriend as First "Lady"...yeah, quite the "leader".
I think you need to re-assess your "leadership" metric.
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edejan
02:19 AM on 07/18/2012
Hey, those aren't MY heroes. My father was a crazy revolutionary. That's his gig, not mine.
06:50 PM on 07/11/2012
In line at the welfare/medicaid office?
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
06:32 PM on 07/11/2012
How about caring where the next American leaders are coming from?
04:35 PM on 07/11/2012
There are no important latino leaders in the United States. If you look at the performance and the corruption of latino leaders in California there are not going to be important latino leaders for a long, long time.
mira chancleta
C'mon, there's NO "La Tino" race
08:38 AM on 07/12/2012
you only need to look at the Mayor of Los Angeles (Villa-Ray-Go-Go) who does NOT suppport his children, who ignores court orders to do so, then is found entertaining 15 y/o "constituents" in the back seat of his limo...yeah, that's "leadership" to celebrate, all right!
03:30 PM on 07/12/2012
you are perfectly correct!!!!
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Snake1994
Snakebite!
03:28 PM on 07/11/2012
These people need to be stopped!
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Kristian Ramos
04:56 PM on 07/11/2012
Which people?
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BeasTT
10:42 PM on 07/13/2012
The Asian Leaders, the White Leaders, the Black Leaders, and every other non-Latino Leader must be stopped.

Isn't that what you really want ?
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edejan
03:32 AM on 07/12/2012
Which people are those?
08:20 PM on 07/17/2012
people like him!!!