- Jeffrey Davidow
Jeffrey Davidow (born
January 26 ,1944 ) is a career foreign service officer from theU.S. state ofVirginia . Davidow has served as a member of theSenior Foreign Service , as well as having been the U.S. Ambassador toZambia ,Venezuela , andMexico .Upon completion of 34 years of service, he retired as America's highest ranking diplomat, one of only three people to hold the personal rank of
Career Ambassador .Davidow was born in
Boston, Massachusetts . He received a B.A. from theUniversity of Massachusetts in 1965 and an MA from theUniversity of Minnesota in 1967. He also did postgraduate work in India 1968 on a Fulbright travel grant. He holds an honorary doctor of laws from the University of Massachusetts granted in 2002.Davidow joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1969 and began his career as a junior officer at the American Embassy in
Guatemala City ,Guatemala , from 1970 to 1972. From 1972 to 1974, he was a U.S. political observer inSantiago, Chile , and held the same position inCape Town ,South Africa , from 1974 to 1976. He returned toWashington, D.C. in 1976 to take a position as a desk officer in the Office of Southern African Affairs, and he went on to be a Congressional fellow from 1978 to 1979.He later became the head of the liaison office at the U.S. Embassy in
Harare ,Zimbabwe , from 1979 to 1982. He returned shortly thereafter to pursue a fellowship atHarvard University , as well as to take-over as Director of the Office of Southern African Affairs in 1985.On
May 5 ,1988 , PresidentRonald Reagan nominated Davidow to be U.S. Ambassador toZambia , a position he held until 1990.In 1991, President
Bill Clinton nominated Davidow to be U.S. Ambassador toVenezuela . Davidow remained ambassador until 1996.From 1996 to 1998, he was the State Department's chief policy maker for the Western Hemisphere, serving in the position of
Assistant Secretary of State .Clinton again nominated Davidow in 1998, this time as U.S. Ambassador to
Mexico . Davidow held this post fromAugust 5 ,1998 untilSeptember 14 ,2002 .After leaving Mexico in September 2002, he returned to Harvard to become a Visiting Fellow at the John F. Kennedy School of Government and the
David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies . During the 2002-03 academic year, he worked extensively with undergraduate and graduate students and wrote a book on U.S.-Mexican relations. "The US and Mexico: The Bear and the Porcupine" was first published in Spanish in Mexico by Casa Editorial Grijalbo and in English by Markus Weiner Publishers in April 2004.Davidow assumed the presidency of the
Institute of the Americas onJune 1 ,2003 . The Institute of the Americas, founded in 1983, is an independent, non-profit institution at theUniversity of California, San Diego . Its mission is to be a catalyst for promoting development and integration as a means to improve the economic, political, and social well-being of the people of the Americas.Davidow and his wife, Joan, reside in
La Jolla, California .
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