Alberto Vargas

Position title: LACIS Associate Director

Email: avargasp@wisc.edu

Phone: +1 (608)262-5622

Address:
Ask Me About: Graduate Advising (LACIS MA), Tinker Visiting Professors, Outreach and Events, Title VI Grant, Tinker-Nave Field Research Program, Links with Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies

Alberto holds a Bachelor’s degree in general agriculture from the Monterrey Technological Institute in Mexico and an M.S. from Texas A&M University. His Ph.D. is in both Forestry and Land Resources from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Alberto’s doctoral research examined the interactions of federal, state, and local actors in the sustainable use and conservation of tropical forests by local communities in Quintana Roo, in southern Mexico. Alberto M. Vargas has extensive training and work experience in the institutional, social and technical aspects of community-based natural resource management and the conservation of natural resources. Alberto has conducted research and implemented projects in agriculture, forestry, energy and coastal resource management in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the United States.

In the past 20 years, Alberto’s consulting has engaged him in work in Central America, the Caribbean, and Mexico working for the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the Federal Environmental Attorney’s Office of the Mexican Government, the International Institute for Environment and Development, the Inter American Development Bank, the World Wildlife Fund-U.S., the Overseas Development Authority, the National Wildlife Federation, the Integral Institute, and the UW-Madison Land Tenure Center. Alberto has been an Honorary Fellow with the Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies since 1998 In the early 1980s Alberto helped found the Centro de Investigaciones de Quintana Roo (CIQRO), an eco-development research center in the Mexican Caribbean, a region rich in natural resources that is dominated economically by tourism. In June 2004, CIQRO became the recipient of the National Ecology Award for work conducted by center staff during the first five years of its operation (1979-1984). In the late 1980s, Alberto worked in Washington, D.C as a consultant and independent scholar in environmental conservation and natural resource management in Latin America. He helped spearhead a campaign that resulted in the first incorporation of environmental considerations into the policies of the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank.

More recently, Alberto spent the last decade as a planning analyst for the State of Wisconsin’s Department of Administration. There he coordinated a statewide effort to conserve Wisconsin’s Great Lakes coastal resources, to address problems of shoreline erosion along Lakes Michigan and Superior and to provide a unified plan among state agencies and the University of Wisconsin-Madison for coastal issues. Alberto was raised in Pachuca, Hidalgo in central Mexico. Alberto is married to Laurie Greenberg, who also holds a Ph.D. in Geography from the UW-Madison. He is the father of two children: Gustavo Zach and Ilana.