LC control no. | n 85237000 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
LC classification | PQ8550.424.A36 |
Personal name heading | Naím, Moisés |
Associated place | Caracas (Venezuela) Naples (Italy) Cambridge (Mass.) |
Located | Washington (D.C.) |
Address | mnaim@CarnegieEndowment.org |
Birth date | 1952 |
Place of birth | Tripoli (Libya) |
Field of activity | Foreign policy Business administration |
Affiliation | Venezuela. Ministerio de Industria y Comercio Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Group of 50 Banco Central de Venezuela, World Bank Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administración Academia Venezolana de Ciencias Económicas |
Profession or occupation | Journalist Columnist Economist Minister of Industry and Commerce Professor Editor |
Found in | El Caso Venezuela, 1984: t.p. (Moisés Naím) p. 152 (academic direoctor of IESA) Multinacionales, c1982: t.p. (Moisés Naím) p. 199, etc. (born 1952; M.S., Ph. D., MIT; published by Monte Avila Editores and the Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administración in Caracas) Dos espías en Caracas, 2019: title page (Moisés Naím) front cover flap (journalist) Author's website, December 20, 2022: (Moisés Naím; master's and Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; internationally-syndicated columnist whose columns have appeared in El País and La Repubblica, the largest daily newspapers in Spain and Italy as well as all leading newspapers in Latin America and The New York Times, The Washington Post, Bloomberg Business Week, Newsweek, Time, Le Monde, El Estadão, and Berliner Zeitung;The end of power; Illicit; he launched Efecto Naím, an innovative weekly television program highlighting surprising world trends (2011); former editor of the journal Foreign Policy (1996-2010); distinguished fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC; founder and chairman of the board of the Group of Fifty (G50) which brings together top-flight progressive Latin American business leaders; member of the board of directors of several global companies; in the early 1990s he served as Ministro de Industria y Comercio of Venezuela, the director of the Banco Central de Venezuela, and as executive director of the World Bank; he was previously professor of business and economics and dean of IESA, Venezuela's leading business school; miembro honorario of the Academia Venezolana de Ciencias Económicas (2020); has links to his Twitter and Facebook pages; author and editor of The revenge of power; Two spies in Caracas (El Caso Venezuela); Rethink the world; Illicit; Prodotto interno mafia; Altered states; Competition policy, deregulation, and modernization in Latin America (with Joseph S. Tulchin); Mexico 1994 (with Sebastian Edwards); Lessons of the Venezuelan experience (with Louis W. Goodman et. al.); Paper tigers and minotaurs; El Caso Venezuela; and Las empresas venezolanas) <https://www.moisesnaim.com/biography> <https://www.moisesnaim.com/books> Author's Twitter page, December 20, 2022: (Moisés Naím) <https://twitter.com/MoisesNaim> Author's Facebook page, December 20, 2022: (Moisés Naím) <https://www.facebook.com/DrMoisesNaim/> Jewish Book Council website, December 20, 2022: posted October 6, 2021 (Moisés Naím; born 1952 in Tripoli, Libya; when he was a toddler his family moved to Naples, Italy for a year and then moved to Venezuela; he grew up in Caracas in a Jewish family; former editor of Foreign Policy for 14 years; in the early 1990s he served as Ministro de Industria y Comercio of Venezuela, the director of the Banco Central de Venezuela, and as executive director of the World Bank; resident of Washington, DC) <https://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/pb-daily/when-antisemitism-came-to-venezuela> Carnegie Endowment for International Peace website, December 20, 2022: (Moisés Naím; mnaim@CarnegieEndowment.org) <https://carnegieendowment.org/experts/21> |
Associated language | eng ita spa |