'Óscar Arias Sánchez' (born
13 September 1940, in
Heredia,
Costa Rica) is the current
President of
Costa Rica and the first Nobel Laureate to be elected a nation's president after winning the award. In 1987 he was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to end the civil wars then raging in several
Central American countries. He served as President from 1986 to 1990, and was elected for a second term in a close election in 2006.
He is also a recipient of the
Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism and a trustee of the
Economists for Peace and Security. In 2003, he was elected to the Board of Directors of the
International Criminal Court's Trust Fund for Victims.
[1]
Early life
Born to an
upper class family in the province of
Heredia, Óscar Arias concluded his secondary schooling at the Colegio Saint Francis in the capital city of
San José. He then enrolled in
Boston University with the intention of studying
medicine, but he soon returned to his home country and completed degrees in
law and
economics at the
University of Costa Rica. In
1967, Arias traveled to the
United Kingdom and enrolled in the
London School of Economics. He received a doctorate degree in
political science from the
University of Essex in 1974. Arias has received over fifty honorary degrees, including doctorates from
Harvard University,
Princeton University,
Dartmouth College,
Oberlin College,
Wake Forest University,
Ithaca College and
Washington University in St. Louis.
First presidency
Arias joined the
National Liberation Party ''(Partido Liberación Nacional,'' or PLN), Costa Rica's main
social democratic party. In
1986 he ran successfully for president on that party's ticket. Arias's presidency saw the transformation of Costa Rica's economy from one based on the traditional
cash crops (
coffee and
bananas) to one more focused on non-traditional agriculture (e.g., of exotic flowers and
fruits) and
tourism. Some within the PLN criticized his administration for abandoning the party's social democrat teachings and promoting a
neoliberal economic model.

Arias's second inauguration at the Estadio Nacional in San Jose, Costa Rica, Monday, 8 May 2006.
Arias received the
1987 Nobel Peace Prize for his work towards the signing of the
Esquipulas II Accords. This was a plan to promote
democracy and peace on the
Central American
isthmus during a time of great turmoil and outside influence in the midst of the
Cold War. Partly due to the collapse of the
Soviet-led
Communist bloc that had traditionally supported leftist governments and insurgencies in Central America, the signing of the accords was indeed followed by an end to most of the fighting in Central America.
Arias then called for a higher level of integration in the Central America region and promoted the creation of the
Central American Parliament (''Parlamento Centroamericano''). During his current administration, Arias has declared that Costa Rica will not enter the Central American Parliament. Arias also modified the country's
educational system. The most notable action in this respect was the reintroduction of standardized academic tests at the end of primary and secondary school.
Second presidency
After a controversial ruling by the
Constitutional Court voided an amendment to the constitution that forbade presidential reelection, Arias announced in
2004 that he intended to run again for president in the
February 2006 general elections. Though for years private polling companies and several news media published polls predicting Arias would win by a wide margin, the election was initially deemed too close to call. A month later, on
7 March, after a manual recount, the official results showed Arias beat center-left contender
Ottón Solís by 18,169 votes (1.2% of valid votes cast). He took the oath of office at noon on
8 May 2006 at the National Stadium.
On
1 June 2007, he switched Costa Rica's diplomatic recognition from
Taiwan (ROC) to
China (PRC), making Costa Rica the 167th nation in the world to do so.
References
1. Amnesty International, 12 September 2003, ''Amnesty International welcomes the election of a Board of Directors''. Retrieved on 1 August 2007.