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Issue Brief

Aug 13, 2020

The Maduro Regime’s Illicit Activities: A Threat to Democracy in Venezuela and Security in Latin America

By Douglas Farah

Introduction By Diego Area and Domingo Sadurní Two months after the internationally recognized interim government marked its first year, Venezuela’s humanitarian crisis, the worst ever in the Western Hemisphere’s modern history, entered a new phase. The coronavirus pandemic, which has rattled even the most developed nations, is further straining a crippled health system already unable […]

Conflict Corruption

New Atlanticist

Apr 3, 2020

The coronavirus infodemic in Latin America will cost lives

By Roberta Braga and Diego Area

Disinformation and misinformation, especially circulating within the biggest economy in Latin America (Brazil) and the country with the worst man-made humanitarian crisis in the hemisphere (Venezuela), can foment national catastrophes that will be felt well beyond the realms of the online information space and national borders.

Brazil Coronavirus

New Atlanticist

Feb 4, 2020

What Trump’s State of the Union means for US foreign policy

By David A. Wemer

US President Donald J. Trump used his third State of the Union address to argue that his administration has “launched the great American comeback” through its economic policies and tough international stances. In a speech that focused heavily on domestic issues, his discussion of foreign policy mainly highlighted what he believed to be his major foreign policy successes, rather than announcements of new plans.

China Energy & Environment

Diego Area was a director of strategic development partnerships at the Atlantic Council’s Adrienne Arsht Latin American Center. He has over twelve years of experience influencing policymaking and developing public-private partnerships to achieve a positive impact in society. At the Council, Area spearheaded strategies to promote constructive US engagement with Latin America and the Caribbean.

Area co-managed the Center’s corporate membership program, partnering with Fortune 500 companies across industries to advance hemispheric prosperity. He led projects alongside the governments of the United States, Canada, and Spain. In addition, he coordinated efforts to engage with the US Congress, shaping policy choices and strategies to steer relations between the United States and Latin America and the Caribbean. Beginning 2018, Area oversaw the creation of the Euro-Americas forward program, the #RoadtotheSummit of the Americas partnership, the US-Chile integration program, the Venezuela Congressional Fellowship, the Venezuela Transatlantic Fellowship, the launch of the Center’s network of Venezuelan women leaders, and the formation of the Venezuela Working Group.

In 2021, Area received the George Washington University’s Guardian of Democracy award, granted to graduates who overcome major hurdles to uphold democracy in the United States and abroad. In 2020, he was selected to participate in the National Endowment for Democracy’s Penn Kemble Forum on Democracy fellowship program.

Before being forced to flee Venezuela, Area served as director of social development in the municipality of Sucre in Caracas, where he led the creation of public-private partnerships establishing a college scholarship program for young students with limited resources, which awarded more than 1,200 scholarships and promoted an alternative dispute resolution program for violence prevention in high-crime areas. Area also supported a vast network of nongovernmental organizations to create community-managed daily care homes for over 2,500 children in the lower-income areas of Sucre. He previously served as campaign manager in the 2015 parliamentary elections in the State of Miranda in Venezuela.

Area has a master’s degree in political management from the George Washington University and a bachelor’s degree in political science from the Universidad Central de Venezuela.