Eduardo Augusto Doryan Garrón was Executive President of the Costa Rican Electricity Institute for the period 2010-2011. Until April 2010 he was the Executive Presidente of the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social. He assumed the role on May 2006, following the second election of presidentOscar Arias. He has also previously served as Minister of Education and Vice-Minister of Science and Technology, all under National Liberation Party governments. Doryan has also had a long and diverse career in academic, public service, consulting and with international organizations.
Doryan served as Costa Rica's Deputy Minister for Science and Technology from 1986 to 1990, during which time he promoted a substantial increase in the number of students pursuing masters and doctoral-level studies in leading North American and European universities. He also played an active role in the efforts to upgrade levels of science and technological research, laboratory facilities, and strengthening the linkages between academia and private companies. Afterwards, he became Minister of Education from 1994-1998 duringJosé María Figueres' presidency. During that time, among some of the important initiatives implemented were those to establish technical education programs to upgrade the skills of the country's workforce, widespread use of computers in primary and secondary schools, the extension of the school year, and the introduction of more challenging curricula to the classroom. He was part of the team at the highest level of the Government that led the attraction of a new wave of foreign direct investment with a higher technological content. After 6 years abroad, he became Executive President of the CCSS from 2006 to 2010. The CCSS is a public social sector agency—the largest public or private entity of the country, which is responsible for both the national health insurance and the national retirement/pension insurance; two central pillars of the social protection network that cover the majority of the inhabitants of the country. Following the election of Laura Chinchilla he was appointed to the Costa Rican Electricity Institute, which until recently also had a state monopoly over telecommunications in the country.
He was a tenured full professor at the University of Costa Rica and later on he also taught at INCAE, a leading graduate business school in Latin America with activities in more than a dozen countries. As head of various major projects while at INCAE he gave advise at the highest levels of government on economic, social and institutional reforms in Central and South America, at different times he was consultant to the Organization of American States, the United Nations Development Program, and the United Nations Industrial Development Organization. He was also the Director of the Latin American Center for Competitiveness and Sustainable Development at INCAE. In that capacity, he provided intellectual and managerial oversight to a team of professionals collaborating with the Central American presidents to develop and implement a strategic framework for competitiveness and sustainable development in the region. As a private consultant he participated in numerous exercises of strategic planning and organizational reform of medium and large firms, and small and large cooperatives. He has also been in his different capacities a speaker in Asia, North America, Latin America, the Caribbean, Europe and Africa on issues related to global reform, knowledge society, economic and social policy, strategic planning and organizational reform, and health and education-related issues.
Personal life
Doryan lives in San José, Costa Rica. He is married to Dra. Carla Victoria Jara and has two children