
Emir J Moros Adams
Emir José Moros Adams is a Venezuelan political scientist, international affairs specialist, former diplomat, entrepreneur, and university professor. He holds a Bachelor's Degree in International Studies from the Central University of Venezuela (UCV), a Specialization in International Law from UCV, and completed all doctoral coursework toward a Ph.D. in Political Science at UCV, with dissertation pending.
He served as Minister-Counsellor at the Embassy of Venezuela in the People's Republic of China and taught at both the School of Political Science and the Graduate School of Law at the Central University of Venezuela. His professional experience also includes leadership roles in international business, commodities trading, and strategic consulting.
His current research focuses on democratic transitions, authoritarian resilience, state capture, institutional reconstruction, transitional justice, and political change in hybrid and authoritarian regimes. He is the creator of the Captured State Transition (CST) framework, a theoretical model developed to explain transitions in systems where political, economic, judicial, and coercive structures become integrated into a single architecture of self-preservation. He also developed the concepts of Institutional Decapture and the Strategic Transformation of Exit Incentives (STEI) as mechanisms for facilitating sustainable political transitions.
His recent work examines Venezuela's political future, democratic reconstruction, state decapture, international incentives, and the role of external actors in transition processes. His publications seek to bridge academic theory and public policy, offering practical frameworks for institutional reform in post-authoritarian environments.
Phone: +13054392222
Address: Jacksonville, Floirda, United States of America
He served as Minister-Counsellor at the Embassy of Venezuela in the People's Republic of China and taught at both the School of Political Science and the Graduate School of Law at the Central University of Venezuela. His professional experience also includes leadership roles in international business, commodities trading, and strategic consulting.
His current research focuses on democratic transitions, authoritarian resilience, state capture, institutional reconstruction, transitional justice, and political change in hybrid and authoritarian regimes. He is the creator of the Captured State Transition (CST) framework, a theoretical model developed to explain transitions in systems where political, economic, judicial, and coercive structures become integrated into a single architecture of self-preservation. He also developed the concepts of Institutional Decapture and the Strategic Transformation of Exit Incentives (STEI) as mechanisms for facilitating sustainable political transitions.
His recent work examines Venezuela's political future, democratic reconstruction, state decapture, international incentives, and the role of external actors in transition processes. His publications seek to bridge academic theory and public policy, offering practical frameworks for institutional reform in post-authoritarian environments.
Phone: +13054392222
Address: Jacksonville, Floirda, United States of America
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