Erika Liriano

Dominican Republic cocoa entrepreneur

Erika Liriano
Born
New York City
NationalityDominican Republic
Alma materFame School, New York City
Occupation(s)Cocoa processor and exporter
Awards100 Women (BBC) (2022)

Erika Stephani Liriano is a cocoa businesswoman from the Dominican Republic.

Childhood and education

Erika Liriano was brought up in Queens in New York City. Her parents were farmers and entrepreneurs from the Dominican Republic. She graduated in Performing Arts from the Fame School in Manhattan. Professionally, she initially specialized in management, commerce, and customer relations.[1]

Activism

She founded INARU, together with her sister Janett, in September 2018. The name means "woman", or "feminine energy" in the language of the indigenous Taíno people of the Caribbean. Their company aimed to improve the distribution of wealth generated by cocoa in the Dominican Republic to ensure equitable distribution among all people involved in the supply chain. In 2022 the company raised US 1.5 million in financing, partly to finance a cocoa butter factory to avoid exporting raw cocoa beans at low prices. In 2022 it gave ecological certification to 300 farmers and secured exclusive contracts for 500 tons of cocoa.[2][3][4]

Recognition

Erika Liriano was one of the BBC's 100 most inspiring women in the world in 2022. Her sister has also won recognition for her work as one of Forbes's "Top 30 Under 30 in Manufacturing and Industry".[5]

References

  1. ^ Nacional, El (6 December 2022). "Erika Liriano, la dominicana entre 100 mujeres más influyentes 2022, según BBC". Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  2. ^ Habib, Yamily (31 March 2022). "These Afro-Latinas Are Revolutionizing the Cocoa Market". Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  3. ^ EFE (7 December 2022). "Erika Liriano, la dominicana que aparece entre las mujeres más influyentes de la BBC". Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  4. ^ "Inaru". The Helm. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  5. ^ Debevoise, Nell Derick. "By Replacing Competition With Compassion, These Founders Are Raising Millions And Changing The World". Forbes. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
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100 Women by BBC in 2022
Politics and education
Maeen Al-Obaidi · Fatima Amiri · Nathalie Becquart · Taisiya Bekbulatova · Kristina Berdynskykh · María Fernanda Castro Maya · Chanel Contos · Eva Copa · Joy Ezeilo · Ibijoke Faborode · Erika Hilton · Park Ji-hyun · Zahra Joya · Ursula von der Leyen · Naomi Long · Ayesha A. Malik · Zara Mohammadi · Mia Mottley · Sepideh Qolian · Roza Salih · Simone Tebet · Kisanet Tedros · Cheng Yen · Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe · Olena Zelenska
Culture and sportActivism and advocacy
Lina Abu Akleh · Velmariri Bambari · Tarana Burke · Sanjida Choya · Heidi Crowter · Sandya Eknelygoda · Gohar Eshghi · Cecilia Flores · Geraldina Guerra Garcés · Moud Goba · Women cutting their hair · Gehad Hamdy · Judith Heumann · Jebina Yasmin Islam · Layli · Hadizatou Mani · Oleksandra Matviichuk · Narges Mohammadi · Tamana Zaryab Paryani · Alice Pataxó · Roya Piraei · Yuliia Sachuk · Suvada Selimović · Efrat Tilma · Zhou Xiaoxuan
Health and science
Aye Nyein Thu · Sirisha Bandla · Victoria Baptiste · Niloufar Bayani · Sandy Cabrera Arteaga · Samrawit Fikru · Wegahta Gebreyohannes Abera · Dilek Gürsoy · Sofia Heinonen · Kimiko Hirata · Judy Kihumba · Marie Christina Kolo · Iryna Kondratova · Asonele Kotu · Erika Liriano · Naja Lyberth · Nigar Marf · Monica Musonda · Ifeoma Ozoma · Yuliia Paievska · Jane Rebecca Rigby · Ainura Sagyn · Monica Simpson · Maryna Viazovska · Yana Zinkevych
2021 ← → 2023