Rogelio Núñez Castellano

Elcano Royal Institute, Spain

Rogelio Núñez Castellano

Elcano Royal Institute, Spain

He is a senior associate researcher at the Elcano Royal Institute and holds a Ph.D. in Contemporary History of Latin America from the Ortega y Gasset University Research Institute of the Complutense University of Madrid. He is also a professor of the master’s degree in Political Action, Institutional Strengthening and Citizen Participation in the Rule of Law at the Francisco de Vitoria University of Madrid, and the master’s degree in Communication and Political Marketing at the Institute of Latin American Studies of the University of Alcalá. He has been a professor at the Universities Camilo José Cela (Spain), Universidad de Los Andes de Chile, and Universidad Francisco Marroquín and Rafael Landívar (Guatemala). He has also been a professor of History of Law and Economics at the Center for University Studies attached to the Rey Juan Carlos University (2015-2016), visiting professor at the Institute of Latin American Studies of the University of Alcalá (2017-2019) and deputy director of Infolatam, a publication specialized in Latin America (2005-2017).

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Latest analysis

Análisis
December 12, 2024
By: Carlos Malamud Rikles and Rogelio Núñez Castellano (12/12/2024). The health crisis that Latin America is currently experiencing due to the spread of dengue fever highlights various structural problems that have not been resolved historically and have accumulated over the last four years. Therefore, this article analyzes how the region reacted to COVID-19, and then compares how many of those errors, inadequacies and inefficiencies, which occurred between 2020 and 2021, have reappeared in 2023 and […]
Análisis
December 22, 2022
By: Carlos Malamud Rikles y Rogelio Núñez Castellano (22/12/2022).
Russia’s role in Latin America is framed in the changing global geopolitical context. Its renewed role in the region since 2008, reinforced following the invasion of Ukraine, is linked to that conquered by other emerging powers. Latin America perceives Russia as an option to diversify its international and economic-commercial relations, and break its historical dependence on the United States, as well as the current one […]