Camilo Pardo-Herrera, PhD
Camilo Pardo-Herrera is an international development scholar focusing on the political economy of development and its intersection with corruption, and political and criminal violence, all with a regional focus on Latin American.
His personal research agenda links different forms of organized crime, political violence, and corruption to development outcomes in the Latin American region. He has also done extensive work on the political economy of natural resource extraction in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
Pardo-Herrera brings an excellent combination of personal experience designing and implementing national-level policy to address organized crime and corruption, a profound commitment for evidence-based policy analysis and design, and strong analytical and methodological capacities to pose and answer complex development questions.
Prior to his academic life, he gathered more than 15 years of experience working on conflict management, post-conflict reconstruction, human rights issues, and natural resource management in the Latin American region. He did so while working for national governments, the civil society, and multilateral development organizations.
Pardo-Herrera finished his PhD in public policy at George Mason University and his master’s degree in democracy and democratization from the University College London thanks to a Chevening Scholarship awarded by the United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
He has presented his research––among other places––at the World Bank, the Organization of American States, the United Nations, as well as at academic forums around Europe and the Americas.
Pardo-Herrera currently teaches at Texas Tech University–Costa Rica and consults on different economic development issues for private and multilateral organizations.
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