Mauricio Solaún

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Mauricio Solaún (born 1935) is a professor of Latin American social and political institutions at the University of Illinois. He holds degrees in law, economics, and sociology from the Universidad de Villanueva, Cuba, Yale University, and the University of Chicago, respectively.

Solaún has been a visiting professor at the Universidad de los Andes and the Universidad Pontificia Javeriana in Bogotá, the Universidad de Belgrano in Buenos Aires, and the Universidad Católica de Valparaíso in Chile. He has been awarded several international fellowships and research grants, and has been a guest lecturer throughout Latin America and several countries in Europe and Asia. He has organized and directed study/internship programs in Colombia, Chile, Argentina, and Mexico.

Solaún was the first Cuban-American to serve as a U.S. Ambassador. From September 1977 to February 1979 he served in Nicaragua, where he organized locally a United States-sponsored mediation by the Organization of American States to avert civil war and obtain the peaceful democratization of the country. These international efforts failed in the face of the local unwillingness to compromise, and Solaún returned to his university post.

[edit] Works

  • Solaún, Mauricio; Michael A. Quinn (1973). Sinners and Heretics: The Politics of Military Intervention in Latin America. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252002849. OCLC 636351. 
  • Solaún, Mauricio; Sidney Kronus (1973). Discrimination without Violence: Miscegenation and Racial Conflict in Latin America. New York: Wiley. ISBN 0471811009. OCLC 632484. 
  • Berry, R. Albert; Ronald G. Hellman; Mauricio Solaún (1980). Politics of Compromise: Coalition Government in Colombia. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Books. ISBN 0878553010. OCLC 4490736. 

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Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
James D. Theberge
United States Ambassador to Nicaragua
September 30, 1977February 26, 1979
Succeeded by
Lawrence A. Pezzullo
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