The Aftermath of War
The legacy of any important historical event must be measured from many viewpoints. The discussion of the legacy is an on-going process because history, after all, is never final, as succeeding generations confront for themselves the forces and ideas that shape our lives.
The issues raised during the U.S.-Mexican War are ones that are still valid today: the contradiction between stated ideals and actual practice; the distinction between a "just" and an "unjust" war; the ways citizenship is defined and identified in a multicultural society; and the challenges in building progressive and democratic nations.
Violence and Violations
A Conversation With Antonia I. Castañeda
Apuntes and the Lessons of History
A Conversation with Jesús Velasco-Márquez
The Legacy of the U.S.-Mexican War
by Miguel Soto
The Legacy of the War
by Miguel Ángel González Quiroga
Was the U.S.-Mexican War Necessary?
By David M. Pletcher
Crucible for Greatness
by John C. Waugh
Vast New Territories
by Robert W. Johannsen
The War Between the United States and Mexico
by Robert Ryal Miller
Many Truths Constitute the Past
A Conversation With David J. Weber