Maryluz Schloeter Paredes

Maryluz (Maria Luz) Schloeter Paredes (born 5 August 1932 in Mérida, Venezuela) worked for many years with refugees in her native Venezuela, and later in several departments of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). She was the 1980 winner of the Nansen Refugee Award,[1] which has been given yearly since 1954 by the UNHCR for excellence in work on behalf of refugees. Her work with refugee children at the Catia Community Center in Caracas led to her nomination for the Nansen Award, which she received for her role as director general of the Venezuela branch of the International Social Service, a voluntary agency which has assisted thousands of refugees from European and Latin American countries.

Education

edit

Schloeter studied at the Universidad Central de Venezuela from 1952 to 1956. She continued her studies at the University of Wisconsin in the United States from 1956-1957, where she received a Master of Science degree in Sociology and Anthropology, and at the Complutense University of Madrid, Spain, from 1957-1958.

She later received a Master of Science in Public Health from the Universidad Central in 1971.

Work

edit
  • Deputy Director, Division of External Relations, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Centre William Rappard, Geneva, Switzerland 1990
  • Head of Sub-Office, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Karachi, Pakistan, 1988-1990.
  • Special Advisor on Refugee Women to Deputy High Commissioner UNCRH, 1988,
  • Head, Social Services Section, Division of Assistance, 1984-1987, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Geneva.
  • Director-General, Venezuelan Branch, International Social Service, 1974-1984.
  • Professor, Fey of Economic & Social Sciences, Universidad Central de Venezuela, 1974-1984.
  • Head of Urban Division, Division of Social Affairs, Ministry of Health & Social Assistance, Venezuela, 1970-1974.
  • Senior Officer, Fundasocial, Caracas, Venezuela, 1970.

References

edit
  1. ^ "1980 Maryluz Schloeter Paredes". UNHCR. Retrieved 2017-08-03.
edit