She served as the Colombian ambassador to Spain in 2019 and 2020.[7]
Personal life
Carolina Barco Isakson is a daughter of Virgilio Barco Vargas, a former mayor, senator, ambassador, President of Colombia and director to the World Bank Board. Her mother, Carolina Isakson Proctor, an American-born former First Lady of Colombia, helped to create, and then direct, Colombia's national anti-poverty program, "Bienestar," which was established in February 1987 to provide food and day care for Colombian's poorest children.[8][9]
Carolina Barco was born in Boston, Massachusetts while her father, Virgilio Barco Vargas, was there studying at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[10] In 1973, Barco received her bachelor of arts degree in Sociology and Economics from Wellesley College in Massachusetts.[11] During her time at Wellesley, she spent a year studying abroad at the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Belgium. In 1975, she received a master's degree in city planning from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. In 1984, she received a master of business administration at IE Business School in Madrid, Spain. From 1990 to 1991, she was a visiting scholar at her father's alma mater, MIT.[12]
Carolina Barco was married to Mauricio Botero Caicedo, with whom she had three daughters. Her brother, Virgilio Barco Isakson, founded one of Colombia's largest gay civil rights NGOs, Colombia Diversa.
Career
Barco conducted research from 1988 to 1999 at the University of the Andes. Assessing the growth of Bogotá and its neighboring towns and cities, she generated information which helped to formulate future urban and territorial growth policies to improve sustainability.[13]
In September 2003, she was announced by The Miami Herald as one of the invited speakers at its annual "America's Conference." The theme for the October program was "Rebuilding Hemispheric Relations: New Economic Perspectives and Changing Foreign Policy Realities."[20]
In 2007, she was one of several high-ranking political figures, celebrities and prominent athletes who attended a black-tie gala for the Formula Smiles Foundation, which was hosted by NASCAR driver Juan Pablo Montoya in the art district of Miami, Florida. Montoya's BeLive Gala raised funds for six Colombian charities.[21]
One of twenty-five women stationed in Washington, D.C. as ambassadors from their respective nations in 2010, Barco was the only female ambassador representing Latin America that year.[22]
In 2019 and 2020, she served as the Colombian ambassador to Spain.[23]
References
^Adams, Lisa J. "OAS Talks End with Security Pact." Tampa, Florida: The Tampa Tribune, October 29, 2003, p. 16 (subscription required).
^"Allies and Diplomats: A conversation between friends with Dr. Condoleezza Rice and Former Colombian Minister Carolina Barco," Embassy of Columbia in the United States, April 5, 2021.
^Adams, "OAS Talks End with Security Pact," The Tampa Tribune, October 29, 2003.
^Toro, "Prueban que guerrilleros viven en Venezuela," El Nuevo Herald, January 21, 2005.
^OAS leadership role will go to Chilean," The Star, April 30, 2005.
^Bachelet, "Controversial bill gains U.S. support," The Miami Herald, July 21, 2005.
^Bachelet, "Uribe's good U.S. vibes turn," The Miami Herald, July 4, 2007.
^Barco, "Getting better every day," in "Other Views," The Miami Herald, July 13, 2010.
^"Allies and Diplomats: A conversation between friends with Dr. Condoleezza Rice and Former Colombian Minister Carolina Barco," Embassy of Columbia in the United States, April 5, 2021.