Daniel Sabet is currently a Senior Learning Advisor at the United States Agency for International Development with over 20 years of experience researching, evaluating, and supporting democracy, human rights, and governance (DRG) interventions. Previously, he was a Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and prior to that a Technical Director at Social Impact, where he led and oversaw numerous evaluations of US government funded DRG programming. He has taught as a visiting professor at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, as an adjunct at American University, and was the founding director of a research center at the University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh. Daniel has particular expertise on issues of public sector reform in diverse policy arenas, including policing, the energy sector, public financial management, and the civil service. His work also focuses on issues of corruption and the role of citizens and civil society in creating government accountability. He is the author of Police Reform in Mexico (2012, Stanford University Press), Nonprofits and their Networks (2008, Arizona University Press), and co-author of Understanding Political Science Research Methods (2013, Routledge). Daniel has a PhD in Political Science from Indiana University.
You can find Daniel’s curriculum vitae here.