Experts

Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao

Assistant Professor and Chair of Public Programming

Fast Facts

  • Miller Center assistant professor
  • Chair, public programming
  • Expertise on Cuba, U.S.-Cuban relations, opposition and dissident movements, democratization, Hispanics in America

Areas Of Expertise

  • Foreign Affairs
  • Latin America and the Caribbean
  • Domestic Affairs
  • Human Rights and Civil Rights

Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao is assistant professor and chair of public programming at the Miller Center. Her programmatic work centers primarily on Miller Center Presents and she served as co-editor of the First Year 2017 opportunity and mobility volume. Prior to her appointment in 2007, Lopez-Gottardi Chao held positions at Emory University’s Institute for Comparative and International Studies, the University of Miami’s North-South Center, and Barclays Bank Latin American Regional Office. She has also worked as a consultant to Freedom House. Lopez-Gottardi Chao received her undergraduate degree in politics and Spanish from Middlebury College and her doctorate from the University of Miami’s School of International Studies. Her dissertation, The Growth of Opposition in Cuba: Problems and Prospects for Democratization, was awarded the 2005 Alberto J. Varona Prize for best dissertation in Cuban studies.

Lopez-Gottardi Chao's scholarship examines the evolving nature of U.S.-Cuban relations, the state of human rights on the island, and Cuba’s opposition and dissident movement, considering prospects for democratization from this sector. The December 2014 change in U.S.-Cuban relations and the direct role played by President Obama in altering this policy has created an alignment between Lopez-Gottardi Chao's core scholarship with a focus on the American presidency and in particular, executive decision making.

Drawing on past research related to democracy promotion efforts via studies of USAID and other governmental and nongovernmental organizations, Lopez-Gottardi Chao is also interested in broader U.S. foreign policy questions. In addition, she is beginning research on the growing Hispanic population in the United States, and the implications this demographic will have on domestic policymaking and the role of the presidency in assimilating this core and expanding minority group. 

Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao News Feed

The Trump administration’s abrupt show of military force in the Caribbean, most notably strikes targeting alleged drug traffickers, has reignited longstanding debates over the boundaries of U.S. power abroad. In particular, the administration’s stance against Venezuela has raised pressing questions regarding the legality, strategic interests, and underlying calculus of American engagement in the hemisphere.
Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao Notes from the Miller Center
Cristina Lopez-Gottardi, an assistant professor at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, told me in an interview that Cuba is in a severe economic and energy crisis. She noted the average monthly wage on the island is roughly $20, while recruits are reportedly being offered about $2,000 a month to fight for Russia, a sum astronomical by local standards. “The economics alone make this a powerful draw,” she said.
Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao Forbes
"Cuba’s leadership remains unwilling to enact the commonsense democratic reforms necessary to alleviate suffering and return dignity to its people."
Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao The Hill
2024 appears to have brought a decisive end to Florida’s status as a swing state. While Trump won the state in 2020, it was by a tight margin of just over 3 percentage points. This year, the gap is roughly 13 points, 56.2 to 42.9 percent. That’s a decisive shift.
Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao Miller Center Election 2024 Blog
Long considered an advantage for the Democrats, Hispanic voting patterns appear to be shifting, with gains expected for the Republican Party. This is making Hispanics a bit of a wild card in this year’s election. And while this shift is still in motion and remains unsettled, there are some who argue that it may be rooted in class and generational changes.
Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao The Daily Progress
"These strengthening Cuba-Russia military and economic ties, coupled with growing economic and social despair in Cuba, should serve as an important wake up call to the United States and its Western allies."
Cristina Lopez-Gottardi Chao The Hill