Lander was born in Caracas. His father,
Luis Lander, was one of the founding members of the
Democratic Action party in Venezuela and had been a member of the short-lived
Rómulo Gallegos government. After the
1948 coup d'état, his father was imprisoned for nearly a year. Upon his release, Luis Lander and his family went into exile and Lander spent his childhood and early teen-age years successively in Mexico, Canada, the US, and Costa Rica. The family returned to Venezuela following the overthrow of the military dictator
Marcos Pérez Jiménez in 1958. His father went on to become the head of the Banco Obero de Venezuela (Workers' Bank of Venezuela) during the presidency of
Rómulo Betancourt. At university Lander initially vacillated between studying physics and psychology before eventually setting on sociology. He received his
Licentiate in sociology from the Central University of Venezuela in 1964 and his PhD in sociology from
Harvard University in 1977. His doctoral dissertation was entitled
The theory of marginality from a Marxist perspective. On his return to Venezuela, Lander became a professor of social science at the Central University of Venezuela where he served as the director of the School of Sociology from 1983 to 1985. He was also a visiting professor at the
London School of Economics and Political Science in 1985 and 1986. Lander was a consultant to the Venezuelan commission negotiating the
Free Trade Area of the Americas, a member of the Editorial Board of the
Venezuelan Journal of Economics and Social Sciences, and one of the organizers of the 2006
World Social Forum. ==Politics==