507
essays on history published in the
Clío
journal of the Dominican Academy of History and articles and essays
on macroeconomics in national and international magazines. He is a weekly columnist in the daily newspaper
Hoy
, where he has published hundreds of articles on economics and history. He has held technical positions at
the Central Bank of the Dominican Republic and in the public sector—as Minister of State without Portfolio,
Minister of Industry and Commerce, President of the Dominican Oil Refinery, and Vice President of the Board
of Directors of the Reserve Bank.
•
Jeannette Miller
Miller is a poet, storyteller, essayist, and art historian. She was born on August 2, 1944, in Santo Domingo,
Dominican Republic. She received a degree in Literature at the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo
where she taught courses. She has also taught at Universidad Central del Este, at the National School of Fine
Arts, at Seminario Arquidiocesano Santo Tomás de Aquino seminary, and at Instituto Bonó (Society of Jesus).
She studied Spanish Language and Literature in Madrid at Instituto de Cultura Hispánica and at Complutense
University, where she took classes with Gonzalo Torrente Ballester and Carlos Bousoño. She also attended
Instituto León XIII and studied Museology and Art with Professor Donald B. Goddall under the patronage of
the Southern Consortium for International Education. She is a salient figure from the so-called
Generación del
60
poetry movement, and was part of the Art and Liberation Movement (1962). In 2000, she was the Director
of the ESPACIOS Cultural Supplement of the
El Caribe
newspaper, and she is a member of the Dominican
Academy of History. She has published more than 50 works, and she has served as a juror at national and
international literature and visual arts competitions. She has received multiple awards, including the United
Nations National Theater Research and Women’s Legal Committee Award (1975); the Eduardo León Jimenes
National Book Fair Prize for her book
Importancia del contexto histórico en el desarrollo del arte dominicano
(2007);
the José Ramón López Story Award National
(2010); and the National Literature Award, sponsored by Fun-
dación Corripio and the Ministry of Culture (2011). Her work has been translated into English, French, Italian,
Portuguese, and German.
•
Gustavo Luis Moré
Moré was born in Santo Domingo in 1956. He is of Italian-Dominican descent. He studied architecture at Uni-
versidad Nacional Pedro Henriquez Ureña (UNPHU) in Santo Domingo, and graduated in 1979. He complet-
ed a specialization course in Monument Restoration in Florence, Italy, in 1980. He was a Fulbright Scholar at
the University of Florida in the United States, and a CIES Scholar at the National Gallery of Art in Washington
D.C., and at the Institute of Aesthetic Research of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)
in Mexico. He has won numerous architectural and urban design contests and has worked on significant
public and private sector projects. He has served as editor of
Archivos de Arquitectura Antillana
magazine since
1996, and is the author of multiple prize-winning books on the architecture of the Greater Caribbean and the
Dominican Republic. He is a member of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and
the founder of DoCoMoMo Dominicano, and has taught at Universidad Iberoamericana (UNIBE), Pontifi-
cia Universidad Católica Madre y Maestra (PUCMM), University of Miami, and Universidad Nacional Pedro
Henriquez Ureña (UNPHU), where he was the director of the Architecture and Urban Planning department.
•
Alba Mizoocky Mota López
Mizoocky Mota López received a degree in Architecture from the Universidad Nacional Pedro Henríquez
Ureña (UNPHU) and a master’s in Landscape Architecture and Sustainability from the Istituto Universitario
di Architettura di Venezia (IUAV). She is a member of the global network of IUAV Academics Abroad and a
speaker and researcher on topics related to sustainable urban planning, urban resilience, landscape architec-
ture, territorial planning and citizen participation. She has been a professor of design, urban planning, archi-
tecture, and sustainability and a thesis adviser at Universidad Nacional Pedro Henríquez Ureña (UNPHU). She
THE AUTHORS




