Difference between revisions of "Mauricio Rojas"

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{{person
 
{{person
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauricio_Rojas
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauricio_Rojas
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|description=Chilean born Swedish politician. Attended the [[Bilderberg/1999|1999 Bilderberg meeting]] as leader of the neoliberal think tank [[Timbro]]. Prominent in immigrant integration questions for the Liberal Party.
|twitter=MauricioRojasmr
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|twitter=https://twitter.com/MauricioRojasmr
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|image=Mauricio Rojas Mullor.png
|nationality=Swedish
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|interests=Timbro
|birth_date=1950-06-28
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|alma_mater=Lund University
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|nationality=Swedish,Chilean
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|political_parties=Liberals (Sweden)
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|birth_date=June 28, 1950
 
|birth_place=Santiago, Chile
 
|birth_place=Santiago, Chile
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|webpage=http://bibliotecademauriciorojas.wordpress.com/
 
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|title=Member of the Riksdag
 
|title=Member of the Riksdag
 
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|title=President
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|start=2000
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|end=2004
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|employer=Timbro
 
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'''Mauricio José Rojas Mullor''' is a Chilean-Swedish [[politician]] and [[political economist]], [[List of members of the Riksdag|member]] of the [[Parliament of Sweden|Riksdag]] between 2002 and 2006.  He attended the [[Bilderberg/1999|1999 Bilderberg meeting]] as leader of the neoliberal think tank [[Timbro]].
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From March to August 2018, he was a strategic adviser and speechwriter for Chilean President [[Sebastián Piñera]]. In August 2018, he was appointed Chile's Minister of Culture for four days, before resigning.
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==Early Life==
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Mauricio Rojas was born in [[Santiago de Chile|Santiago]], Chile. According to his own version, he as an active [[socialist]] and member of [[Revolutionary Left Movement (Chile)|MIR]] in his youth, had to escape to Sweden in 1974 following the [[Chilean coup of 1973|military coup]] and the subsequent persecution of leftist activists by the new [[Augusto Pinochet|Pinochet]] regime.<ref>https://www.amazon.es/Di%C3%A1logo-conversos-Roberto-Ampuero-ebook/dp/B0178HVXDU</ref>
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This claim is denied by the management of MIR who say his claim of membership is a lie, and that the belonged to an unconnected [[troskist]] group. In [[1974]] his mother was arrested because she hid a socialist professor in her house. She was arrested and taken to [[Villa Grimaldi]] where she was intensely [[tortured]]. Subsequently, she left for [[Sweden]]. As a result of her mother's departure from Chile, Rojas also traveled to Sweden later, but he was not persecuted by the dictatorship or a political refugee.<ref name=eldesconceirto>https://www.eldesconcierto.cl/nacional/2018/08/12/andres-pascal-mauricio-rojas-nunca-milito-en-el-mir.html</ref><ref name=eldesconceirto>https://www.eldesconcierto.cl/nacional/2018/08/12/andres-pascal-mauricio-rojas-nunca-milito-en-el-mir.html</ref>
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During the first years in Sweden, Rojas resumed its cooperation with MIR and became a member of MIR's support groups.
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After living in Sweden for a few years, he eventually changed his political views and began to advocate liberal ideas.
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Rojas received a [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]] in [[economic history]] from [[Lund University]] in Sweden in 1986 and became Docent (Associate Professor) of Economic History at Lund University in 1995. Rojas was lecturer at Lund University from 1981 to 1999, when he became the Director of the Centre for Welfare Reform at the Stockholm-based think tank [[Timbro]]. Lately he was both Vice President and President of Timbro.
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==Political work in Sweden==
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In the [[2002]] election, he was elected to the Riksdag for the [[Liberals (Sweden)|Liberal People's Party]] as an "independent liberal", without being a member of the party until the summer of 2004. The non-partisan candidacy caused some debate, not least within the People's Party. However, since Rojas has always had the party designation FP and participated fully in the work of the parliamentary group, he was not politically independent in the true sense.
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Rojas was the People's Party's spokesman on refugee and integration issues from 2004 to October 2006 and then made several notable statements that made him identified with the so-called 'demanding line' that the People's Party took during the latter part of [[Lars Leijonborg]]'s leadership and accused of xenophobia, which he denied.<ref>http://www.folkpartiet.se/FPTemplates/ListPage____14499.aspx</ref>  He authored various studies of great importance for the Swedish integration debate, such as ''Utanförskapet's karta'' in 2004 (also 2005 and 2006), as well as the basis for the party program 2005 in immigrant integration issues.
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He was threatened with murder by extremists during the 2006 election campaign, which led to him being protected by [[Säpo]]. After the 2006 election, Rojas lost his seat in the Riksdag, but after the [[Fredrik Reinfeldt|Reinfeldt]] government took office, he returned to the Riksdag after a few days as a replacement for Lars Leijonborg - who became Minister of Education. In the autumn of 2008, Rojas left the Riksdag and Sweden due to the treatment he felt he had experienced in connection with the Swedish political debate.<ref>http://meritwager.wordpress.com/2008/10/27/mauricio-rojas-lamnar-sverige/</ref>
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In a number of books and articles, Rojas has highlighted factors of importance for integration processes. He has also taken an active part in the debate on immigration and integration policy. In addition to research in the field, Rojas has worked with development economics, the welfare state and political philosophical themes.
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Rojas has pursued controversial views that have often provoked debate. He advocated that Sweden should increase the number of refugees received and at the same time make clearer demands for compensation for the right to stay in the country, the right to social benefits, child benefits, etc. He proposed (from around the year 2000) a holistic approach to combat immigrant exclusion and crime and pointed to the socio-cultural aspects that may explain the differences in crime rates between different immigrant groups.<ref>http://bibliotecademauriciorojas.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/m-rojas-intervju-om-invandring-och-integration.pdf</ref>
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Rojas also supported the [[invasion of Iraq in 2003]] <ref>http://www.dn.se/DNet/jsp/polopoly.jsp?d=572&a=126491&previousRenderType=2</ref>  and took an active part in the [[globalization]] debate, as the initiator of the [[Motattac]] Network, which advocated a globalization-friendly attitude.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20121104060334/http://motattac.nu/</ref>
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Since April 2019, he has been a member of the Moderates' Integration Commission.<ref>https://www.expressen.se/nyheter/moderaterna-varvar-rojas-till-integrationskommission/</ref>
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==Chilean politics==
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In 2016 he assumed the direction of the [[Adam Smith]] chair at the [[Universidad del Desarrollo de Chile]].<ref>https://negocios.udd.cl/noticias/2016/09/udd-crea-catedra-adam-smith-e-incorpora-a-mauricio-rojas-para-dirigirla/</ref>
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From March to August 2018, he was a strategic adviser and speechwriter for Chilean President [[Sebastián Piñera]]. In August 2018, he was appointed Chile's Minister of Culture for four days before being forced to resign following widespread criticism. The background was that he criticized the Museum of History and Human Rights in [[Santiago]], which documents the crimes committed under the rule of military dictator [[Augusto Pinochet]] 1973-1990, and called the museum "a montage […] that falsifies Chilean history".<ref>https://www.latercera.com/politica/noticia/mauricio-rojas-historiador-liberal-converso-cultura/276366/</ref><ref>https://www.aftonbladet.se/kultur/a/5Vqejb/mauricio-rojas-orsakar-politisk-skandal-i-chile</ref> Rojas claimed he was the victim of a defamation campaign. His friend Nobel laureate [[Mario Vargas Llosa]] also defended Rojas.
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==Books==
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He has written several books in the field of [[international economics]], immigration matters and on the [[Nordic model|Swedish model]], many of them translated into several languages. Available in English are ''The Rise and Fall of the Swedish Model'' (London, 1998), ''Millennium Doom'' (London, 1999), ''Beyond the Welfare State'' (Stockholm, 2001) and ''The Sorrows of Carmencita: Argentina’s Crisis in a Historical Perspective'' (Stockholm, 2002). His latest published book is ''Reinventar el Estado del bienestar'' (Madrid, 2008).
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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{{PageCredit
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|site=Wikipedia
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|date=01.01.2022
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|url=https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauricio_Rojas
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}}

Latest revision as of 04:47, 10 February 2022

Person.png Mauricio Rojas   TwitterRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(politician, economist)
Mauricio Rojas Mullor.png
BornJune 28, 1950
Santiago, Chile
NationalitySwedish, Chilean
Alma materLund University
Member ofCivita
InterestsTimbro
PartyLiberals (Sweden)
Chilean born Swedish politician. Attended the 1999 Bilderberg meeting as leader of the neoliberal think tank Timbro. Prominent in immigrant integration questions for the Liberal Party.

Employment.png President Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
2000 - 2004
EmployerTimbro
Preceded byAlex Krauer

Mauricio José Rojas Mullor is a Chilean-Swedish politician and political economist, member of the Riksdag between 2002 and 2006. He attended the 1999 Bilderberg meeting as leader of the neoliberal think tank Timbro.

From March to August 2018, he was a strategic adviser and speechwriter for Chilean President Sebastián Piñera. In August 2018, he was appointed Chile's Minister of Culture for four days, before resigning.

Early Life

Mauricio Rojas was born in Santiago, Chile. According to his own version, he as an active socialist and member of MIR in his youth, had to escape to Sweden in 1974 following the military coup and the subsequent persecution of leftist activists by the new Pinochet regime.[1]

This claim is denied by the management of MIR who say his claim of membership is a lie, and that the belonged to an unconnected troskist group. In 1974 his mother was arrested because she hid a socialist professor in her house. She was arrested and taken to Villa Grimaldi where she was intensely tortured. Subsequently, she left for Sweden. As a result of her mother's departure from Chile, Rojas also traveled to Sweden later, but he was not persecuted by the dictatorship or a political refugee.[2][2]

During the first years in Sweden, Rojas resumed its cooperation with MIR and became a member of MIR's support groups.

After living in Sweden for a few years, he eventually changed his political views and began to advocate liberal ideas.

Rojas received a Ph.D. in economic history from Lund University in Sweden in 1986 and became Docent (Associate Professor) of Economic History at Lund University in 1995. Rojas was lecturer at Lund University from 1981 to 1999, when he became the Director of the Centre for Welfare Reform at the Stockholm-based think tank Timbro. Lately he was both Vice President and President of Timbro.

Political work in Sweden

In the 2002 election, he was elected to the Riksdag for the Liberal People's Party as an "independent liberal", without being a member of the party until the summer of 2004. The non-partisan candidacy caused some debate, not least within the People's Party. However, since Rojas has always had the party designation FP and participated fully in the work of the parliamentary group, he was not politically independent in the true sense.

Rojas was the People's Party's spokesman on refugee and integration issues from 2004 to October 2006 and then made several notable statements that made him identified with the so-called 'demanding line' that the People's Party took during the latter part of Lars Leijonborg's leadership and accused of xenophobia, which he denied.[3] He authored various studies of great importance for the Swedish integration debate, such as Utanförskapet's karta in 2004 (also 2005 and 2006), as well as the basis for the party program 2005 in immigrant integration issues.

He was threatened with murder by extremists during the 2006 election campaign, which led to him being protected by Säpo. After the 2006 election, Rojas lost his seat in the Riksdag, but after the Reinfeldt government took office, he returned to the Riksdag after a few days as a replacement for Lars Leijonborg - who became Minister of Education. In the autumn of 2008, Rojas left the Riksdag and Sweden due to the treatment he felt he had experienced in connection with the Swedish political debate.[4]

In a number of books and articles, Rojas has highlighted factors of importance for integration processes. He has also taken an active part in the debate on immigration and integration policy. In addition to research in the field, Rojas has worked with development economics, the welfare state and political philosophical themes.

Rojas has pursued controversial views that have often provoked debate. He advocated that Sweden should increase the number of refugees received and at the same time make clearer demands for compensation for the right to stay in the country, the right to social benefits, child benefits, etc. He proposed (from around the year 2000) a holistic approach to combat immigrant exclusion and crime and pointed to the socio-cultural aspects that may explain the differences in crime rates between different immigrant groups.[5]

Rojas also supported the invasion of Iraq in 2003 [6] and took an active part in the globalization debate, as the initiator of the Motattac Network, which advocated a globalization-friendly attitude.[7]

Since April 2019, he has been a member of the Moderates' Integration Commission.[8]

Chilean politics

In 2016 he assumed the direction of the Adam Smith chair at the Universidad del Desarrollo de Chile.[9]

From March to August 2018, he was a strategic adviser and speechwriter for Chilean President Sebastián Piñera. In August 2018, he was appointed Chile's Minister of Culture for four days before being forced to resign following widespread criticism. The background was that he criticized the Museum of History and Human Rights in Santiago, which documents the crimes committed under the rule of military dictator Augusto Pinochet 1973-1990, and called the museum "a montage […] that falsifies Chilean history".[10][11] Rojas claimed he was the victim of a defamation campaign. His friend Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa also defended Rojas.

Books

He has written several books in the field of international economics, immigration matters and on the Swedish model, many of them translated into several languages. Available in English are The Rise and Fall of the Swedish Model (London, 1998), Millennium Doom (London, 1999), Beyond the Welfare State (Stockholm, 2001) and The Sorrows of Carmencita: Argentina’s Crisis in a Historical Perspective (Stockholm, 2002). His latest published book is Reinventar el Estado del bienestar (Madrid, 2008).


 

Event Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/19993 June 19996 June 1999Portugal
Sintra
The 47th Bilderberg, 111 participants
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References

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