Mario_Ojeda_Gómez
Mario Ojeda Gómez
Mexican scholar and internationalist
Mario Ojeda Gómez (10 August 1927 – 1 November 2013)[1] was a Mexican scholar and internationalist. He served as president and later Professor Emeritus at El Colegio de México (1997).[2] He was Mexico's Ambassador to UNESCO from 1995 to 1998.[3]
Ojeda Gómez was also Investigador Nacional Emérito (Emeritus Fellow) of the Sistema Nacional de Investigadores (SNI), the México's National System of Researchers (2005).
Ojeda Gómez obtained his bachelor's degree in international relations from the School of Political and Social Sciences (Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales) of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, of which he was part of its founding generation; he also undertook his graduate studies at Harvard University, where he studied under John Kenneth Galbraith, Henry Kissinger and Hans Morgenthau, among others. Ojeda Gómez crucially adapted Realism in International Relations to the study of Mexican Foreign Policy.[4]