Roberto Izurieta
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Roberto Augusto Izurieta Canoba (Montevideo, 1963)[1][2] is an Ecuadorian professor, political strategist and diplomat of Uruguayan origin. Was the Secretary of Communication of Ecuador, during the governments of Daniel Noboa,[3] previously was the Secretary of Communication during the government of Jamil Mahuad, from 1998 to 2000. He was also Ecuador's ambassador to Chile (from 2022 to 2023) and a professor at George Washington University for more than two decades.[4]
As a political strategist, he has worked as an advisor to presidents such as the Ecuadorian Guillermo Lasso, the Peruvian Alejandro Toledo, the Mexican Vicente Fox and the Guatemalan Álvaro Colom.[5] His political work has earned him recognitions such as the Rising Star award from the American magazine Campaigns and Elections, from which he was the first Latin American to receive it.[4]
He was born in January 1963 in Montevideo, Uruguay,[1][2] a country where his father had traveled to study veterinary medicine. He moved to Ecuador during the dictatorship of Guillermo Rodríguez Lara and completed his secondary studies in Quito at the San Gabriel and Spellman schools, from which he graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1981. He completed his higher education at the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, where he completed the degree in economics, and later studied a master's degree in political science at Southern Illinois University Carbondale through a Fulbright scholarship.[1][6]
After moving to the United States, he began working in 2001 as a professor at George Washington University, where he taught for the next two decades and was also director of Latin American projects at the Graduate School of Political Management.[4]