Michael Shifter

  • United States

This post is also available in: Português Español

Michael Shifter is former president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a leading policy forum on Western Hemisphere affairs based in Washington, DC. Shifter held senior positions at the Dialogue for nearly three decades, including a dozen, until April 2022, as president. He currently serves as senior fellow at the organization.   

Shifter writes and comments regularly on US-Latin American relations and hemispheric issues.  His articles have been published widely, including in The New York TimesForeign AffairsForeign PolicyFinancial TimesCurrent HistoryAmericas Quarterly, The Washington PostThe Los Angeles TimesMiami Herald, Journal of DemocracyPolitico, and Harvard International Review, as well as in leading newspapers and journals in Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean. He is often interviewed by US, Latin American, European and Chinese media, and appears frequently on CNN and BBC. Shifter has lectured on an array of topics concerning the Americas at prominent global affairs centers and universities in the United States, Latin America and Europe and has testified many times before the US Congress on US policy towards Latin America and the Caribbean.

Prior to joining the Dialogue, Shifter directed the Latin American and Caribbean program at the National Endowment for Democracy and, before that, the Ford Foundation’s governance and human rights program in the Andean region and Southern Cone, where he was based, first, in Lima, Peru and then in Santiago, Chile. In the 1980s, he was representative in Brazil with the Inter-American Foundation, and also worked at the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Latin American Program.

Since 1993, Shifter has been an adjunct professor at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, where he teaches Latin American politics. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Latin American Studies Association and is a contributing editor of Current History. He is currently a board member of InSight Crime and serves on the Advisory Committee of Human Rights Watch/Americas Division.  He was previously on the board of the Washington Office on Latin America and the Social Science Foundation of the Graduate School of International Relations at the University of Denver.

Shifter graduated Phi Beta Kappa and Summa Cum Laude from Oberlin College and holds a MA in sociology from Harvard University, where he taught Latin American development and politics for four years.  He has been awarded decorations by the Colombian, Spanish and Peruvian governments.   

Analysis

Events

ONLINE EVENT: Building Economic Resilience—Japan’s Evolving Approach to Engagement with Latin America

Online Event

ONLINE EVENT: Peru’s Precarious Politics — The Crisis Deepens

Online Event

ONLINE EVENT: Interpreting Increased Remittances to Latin America and the Caribbean

Online Event

Press Mentions

This post is also available in: Português Español

It’s hard to read Ortega’s mind. Perhaps he acted now because the costs of keeping these prisoners, with the chance that more would die, outweighed the benefits.

Michael Shifter

This post is also available in: Português Español

The fact is, there’s enormous polarization, distrust of institutions and just anger, anger because there’s been very little progress made [in Latin America].

Michael Shifter

The Inter-American Dialogue Education Program

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER / SUSCRÍBASE A NUESTRO BOLETÍN:

* indicates required