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Carlos Diaz-Rosillo

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Carlos Diaz-Rosillo
Carlos Diaz Rosillo.jpg
Basic facts
Organization:Harvard University
Role:Lecturer and dean
Location:Cambridge, Massachusetts
Expertise:Government
Education:•Tufts University (B.A., international relations)
•Tufts University (B.S.C.E., civil engineering)
•Harvard University (M.P.P., public policy)
•Harvard University (Ph.D., government)[1]
Website:Official website


Carlos Diaz-Rosillo is a lecturer of government at Harvard University's Extension School as well as the Dean at Harvard's Dunster House. Diaz-Rosillo was also a member of Donald Trump's presidential transition team, a group of advisors tasked with recommending presidential appointments for the incoming administration.[2]

Career

A Miami native, Carlos Diaz-Rosillo studied international relations and civil engineering at Tufts University. He followed this with a master's degree in public policy and a Ph.D. in government from Harvard University.[1] His focus was the American presidency.[3]

Diaz-Rosillo is a lecturer on government, mainly the presidency, campaigns and elections, political leadership, public policy, and comparative chief executive politics, at Harvard University's Extension School.[1][2] He also serves as the Allston Burr Dean for the university's Dunster House as well as the director of transfer advising at Harvard.[1][3][4] He is a faculty member of the Department of Government at the university.[5]

Donald Trump presidential transition team, 2016-2017

See also: Donald Trump presidential transition team

Diaz-Rosillo was a member of Donald Trump's presidential transition team in his first presidential term. The transition team was a group of around 100 aides, policy experts, government affairs officials, and former government officials who were tasked with vetting, interviewing, and recommending individuals for top cabinet and staff roles in Trump's administration. He was tasked with being the "executive authority adviser," according to sources cited by Politico[2][4]

See also

External links

Footnotes