Juan Agustín Figueroa

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Succeeded byEmiliano Ortega
Born(1933-11-25)25 November 1933
Santiago, Chile
Juan Agustín Figueroa
Minister of Agriculture
In office
11 March 1990  11 March 1994
PresidentPatricio Aylwin
Preceded byJuan Ignacio Domínguez
Succeeded byEmiliano Ortega
Personal details
Born(1933-11-25)25 November 1933
Santiago, Chile
Died7 July 2016(2016-07-07) (aged 82)[1]
Santiago, Chile
Party
SpouseMarcela Paz Elgueta
ChildrenFour
Parent(s)Rafael Figueroa
Aida Yávar
Alma materUniversity of Chile (LL.B)
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionLawyer

Juan Agustín Figueroa Yávar (25 November 1933 − 7 July 2016) is a Chilean politician who served as minister of State.[2][3][4][5]

The son of Rafael Figueroa González and Aida Yávar,[6] he completed his primary and secondary education at the German School of Santiago and his university studies at the Faculty of Law of the University of Chile, where he obtained his degree as a lawyer in 1958.

At that institution, he met and became friends with local businessman Ricardo Claro (1934–2008),[7][8] who went on to lead business groups spanning sectors ranging from industry to transport, including wineries and the media.

In the academic field, he was a full professor of procedural law at the Faculty of Law, University of Chile and president of the Governing Board of the University of Santiago.[9][10]

Due to his friendship with Claro, he served as a director of various companies, including Compañía Electro Metalúrgica (Elecmetal), Marítima de Inversiones S.A. (Marinsa), Cristalerías de Chile, and Viña Santa Rita.[9] Following the latter's death in October 2008, he was appointed president of that winery.[11]

In his professional career, he practiced law together with Alberto Coddou and Juan Esteban Correa in a law firm founded in 1923 by his father, in which Vicente Monty and Sergio Insunza had also previously worked, and which is currently headed by his son Ignacio Figueroa. In his professional practice, he took part in criminal cases; corporate, commercial, and mining arbitration; defense of public bodies against claims by private parties; partition proceedings in matters of inheritance; civil and commercial compensation lawsuits before the ordinary courts; and the handling of appeals in cassation in civil and criminal matters before the Supreme Court. He was also one of the founding partners of the digital newspaper El Mostrador and a member of its first board of directors.[12]

Political career

References

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