Alumni Profiles
Cornell’s public affairs alumni work for an impressive cross-section of public and private enterprises. They are generous in offering pertinent advice to current and incoming Fellows, guiding them as they make exciting new career choices.
Here’s what alumni say about their CIPA experience and their careers in public policy.
Laura Tamayo '02
Malaika Eaton '02, J.D. '02
Naomi Calvo '98
Pablo Landoni '97
Todd Stoltzfus '98
Associate, Analytical Tools
Recapitalization Advisors, Inc.
Boston, Massachusetts
“Before applying to CIPA I had worked for more than ten years in the area of management and financial consulting. I was looking for a change of focus, away from the private sector and towards the public sector; away from corporate finance and towards public policy and community development. Being older, with considerable life experience, I wanted to immerse myself in a flexible graduate program where I could chart my own path with regard to the subjects I studied. To that end, I found precisely what I wanted in CIPA.
“While in Ithaca, I took the opportunity to work at a local county workforce-development office and also performed an organizational study for the City of Ithaca from which I developed my master's thesis. Since graduation, I have been working for a small firm that offers financial consulting in the area of affordable housing. We’re a middle player between the government, real estate owners, and tenants, so it’s a great mix of policy and analysis. And most importantly to me, the firm ultimately produces tangible social benefits. All in all, I feel as though I’ve made that career turn I was looking for. Not only did CIPA prepare me through specific course work, but the program, and Cornell in general, gave me a greater understanding of the big-picture political environment surrounding my work.
“One of the best things about having the M.P.A. degree is that it is mine for life. It has opened doors to many professional options that I simply didn’t have before. Since leaving, I stay in touch with the program via e-mail and occasionally pull up the Webcam to look at the campus. I miss it. I had the best experience there.”
Laura Tamayo, M.P.A. '02
Advisor, Office of the Undersecretary of Government
Secretary of State, Republic of Mexico
Mexico City, Mexico
“I began the CIPA program after working in the office of the spokesperson for the President of Mexico, and with the Ministry of Environment’s liaison with the Senate. I chose CIPA because of the flexibility of the program. The core courses had enough mathematical material; since I had done political science, I wanted something more quantitative — more statistics and economics. I took the core courses, some classes in sustainable development, and a class in national security, but basically focused on sustainable development.
“Now, in addition to my work with the Mexican government, I’m publishing a column in a local newspaper and will soon be in a national newspaper as well. I wouldn’t have been able to do this without what I learned at Cornell. I really love the place. I made good friends and it was a wonderful experience. CIPA gave me not only a perspective on my country and others, but also structure for thinking.”
Malaika Eaton, M.P.A./ J.D. '02
Law Clerk, Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
Boise, Idaho
“One of the primary reasons I chose Cornell was that it was one of the only places in the nation where I could do a law degree at an outstanding law school and also do an M.P.A. focusing on what I wanted to focus on. I was interested in a joint program for a more in-depth view of federal regulatory policy in the environmental arena.
“CIPA gives so much flexibility. I hope eventually to teach environmental law. The CIPA experience has been helpful in advancing my career. The training in statistics and economics has made me stand out as a candidate, especially in a field that focuses on people who have only a law degree.”
Naomi Calvo, M.P.A. '98
Ph.D. Candidate, Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts
“I spent a year as a VISTA volunteer working at a family support center. We provided English as a Second Language programs for migrant workers, provided teen programs, and started a farmers market. I served on a committee charged with distributing state funding at the local level. They had hired consultants to help them — I decided I wanted to be one of those people so I could do it better, and became interested in social policy in general. That’s why I pursued a degree at CIPA.
“I really enjoyed the program. It was quite flexible and that suited me well. I took a lot of social policy courses, and what I appreciated was being able to take them in so many different places, from so many different perspectives. I studied simulation modeling, cost-benefit analysis, linear programming – it was all so practical, and it gave me hands-on tools for dealing with real problems. It completely changed how I approach problem solving.
“My thesis advisor said, 'I’m going to a conference, give me your resume.' I wound up working as a consultant in a small company doing education finance and education policy analysis. Now I’m working on my doctorate in public policy, focusing on K-12 education.”
Pablo Landoni, M.P.A. '97
Educational Policy Specialist
Catholic University of Uruguay
Pablo Landoni came to Cornell from Uruguay, where he had earned a law degree and served as the country’s Vice Minister of Education and Culture. He applied to CIPA to gain more academic grounding in public policy issues, and received both Fulbright and Organization of American States fellowships.
Since returning to Uruguay, he has worked at the Catholic University of Uruguay, where he is responsible for managing relationships between the university and the Ministry of Education. “I’m making contributions to higher education public policy, not from the state’s point of view, but rather from the institution’s,” he explains. He is working on accreditation issues both in Uruguay, and at the international level, working with representatives of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile and Bolivia to develop an accreditation mechanism that will promote academic and student exchange among these countries.
Landoni credits the CIPA program for providing him with the “tool kit” he needed to manage the policy issues he deals with on a day-to-day basis. “The public officials I work with get the big picture in terms of policy design, but they forget the details involved with actually implementing that policy.” It was Professor David Lewis’ course in quantitative methods that Landoni found particularly useful when it came time to develop a model to help understand how Uruguay’s higher education system will grow in the future. He has offered to help obtain internships in Uruguay for CIPA Fellows with an interest in higher education policy.
Todd Stoltzfus, M.P.A. '98
Bureau of Population Refugees and Migration
U.S. Department of State
Washington, D.C.
“Before going to Cornell I spent five years with World Vision, an NGO providing emergency relief services in Africa (Somalia and Sudan) and Eastern Europe (Bosnia). I liked the CIPA program because it had a strong reputation, and it was flexible enough to allow its Fellows to pursue areas that were of interest to them. I wanted to develop business and project management skills while remaining in the public policy arena.
“The CIPA program allowed me to take advantage of the whole spread of programs available at Cornell, from the business school to the Department of City and Regional Planning . My studies gave me a solid foundation in the public policy field.
“Now I’m working as a program officer managing refugee assistance programs in central Africa. I actually pursued government service through the federal Presidential Management Internship placement program; CIPA directed me towards that program, which I would not have known about. More generally, CIPA gave me solid training in government and policy work.”
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