The extent of Albizu's legacy is generally the subject of passionate discussion by both followers and detractors. His followers state that Albizu's political and military actions served (even unintentionally) as a primer for positive change in Puerto Rico, these being:
* the improvement of labor conditions for peasants and workers
* a belated yet more accurate assessment of the colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the
United States by the political establishment in Washington
* and a set of social and political conditions that led to positive change in the political - and eventually economic - environment prevailing in the country.
Detractors denounce Albizu as a radical
fascist, whose actions only brought turmoil to Puerto Rico. Some claim that the weak following of the
Puerto Rican independence movement in the present day can be traced, if not to Albizu, to the repression that his actions brought upon the movement.
Albizu can be definitely credited, however, with preserving and promoting Puerto Rican
nationalism and national symbols, at a time where they were virtually a
taboo in the country. The formal adoption of the Puerto Rican flag as a national emblem by the Puerto Rican government can be traced to Albizu (even while he denounced this adoption as the "watering-down" of an otherwise sacred symbol into a "colonial flag"); the revival of public observance of the
Grito de Lares and its significant icons was a direct mandate from him as leader of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party.
Albizu was the most vocal and visible Puerto Rican of African descent of his generation; Afro-Puerto Rican leaders of other political extractions (such as
Ernesto Ramos Antonini and
Jose Celso Barbosa) attained similar status only after facing (and enduring) considerable bouts with
racism. Albizu, while not exempt from it, confronted it and denounced it publicly.
Albizu's diagnosis of the colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States earned him prison time, yet modern scholars take surprise at how accurate the diagnosis is, even years after Albizu's death. Finally, his political philosophy persists to this day, synthesized in quotes and verbal images.
An alternative high school in
Chicago, called the Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos Puerto Rican High School, is located in the Puerto Rican Cultural Center. There, students learn about
Puerto Rican history and culture, in the context of local community development. Archives there include original letters, representations of Albizu Campos in sculpture and art, as well as other material related to his life.
Additionally, five public schools in Puerto Rico are named after him, as well as numerous streets in most of Puerto Rico's municipalities. In
1976, Public School 161 in
Harlem in
New York City was named after him as well.