Ariel Armony | |
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Vice Provost for Global Affairs at University of Pittsburgh | |
In office June 2017 – Present | |
Personal details | |
Born | Buenos Aires | September 17, 1961
Nationality | Argentinian |
Spouse(s) | Mirna Kolbowski |
Alma mater |
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Profession | Professor, political scientist, university administrator |
Ariel Armony is an Argentinian academic and the current vice provost for global affairs at the University of Pittsburgh.[1] Armony is the author of numerous books on political science and Latin American studies.[2] Armony has led University of Pittsburgh's international programs since he was named the senior director of international programs and director of the University Center for International Studies in 2014.[3]
Armony was born and raised in Buenos Aires. He was 14 when a military coup started the junta known as the National Reorganization Process.[citation needed] He attended the University of Buenos Aires in the 1980s, working as a journalist and as a director and actor for a theatre company.[citation needed] He traveled to the United States to study for his master's degree in international affairs at Ohio University, and stayed in the U.S. to earn his PhD in political science from the University of Pittsburgh.[4]
Armony began to trace the role of the Argentine military in their support of counter-revolutionary movements throughout Latin America, which led to his book Argentina, the United States, and the Anti-Communist Crusade in Latin America (Ohio, 1997).[5] The book was translated into Spanish and published by the Universidad de Quilmes in Argentina. [6]
After serving first as professor and then as director of Latin American Studies at Colby College, Dr. Armony accepted a Fulbright scholarship to teach at Nankai University. Much of his subsequent work has focused on the role of China in Latin America. He also wrote The Dubious Link: Civic Engagement and Democratization (Stanford, 2004), which made the University Press Bestsellers List [7]. His work has been published in a number of academic journals in the United States, Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, and China. [8]
Prior to moving to Pittsburgh, Dr. Armony was director of the University of Miami’s Center for Latin American Studies, a position he held for four years. His research has been supported by the Rockefeller Foundation, Mellon Foundation, Kellogg Foundation, the International Development Research Centre, the Inter-American Foundation, and the International Labour Organization, among others. In addition to his academic appointments, Dr. Armony has served as a consultant for the US State Department, Argentina’s Foreign Affairs Ministry, and Honduras’ National Commissioner for Human Rights.[9]