Hugo Herrera | |||||||||||||
Office1: | Director of Diego Portales University Philosophy Institute | ||||||||||||
Term Start1: | 15 January 2015 | ||||||||||||
Term End1: | 9 January 2020 | ||||||||||||
Office2: | President of the University of Valparaiso Students' Federation | ||||||||||||
Term Start2: | March 1995 | ||||||||||||
Term End2: | December 1995 | ||||||||||||
Successor2: | Pablo Badenier | ||||||||||||
Birth Date: | 5 February 1974 | ||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Vina del Mar, Chile | ||||||||||||
Party: | Unión Demócrata Independiente (1993–1997) Close to Renovación Nacional (2018–present) | ||||||||||||
Occupation: | Political thinker | ||||||||||||
Profession: | Lawyer, Philosopher | ||||||||||||
Module: |
|
Hugo Eduardo Herrera Arellano (born 5 February 1974) is a Chilean lawyer, philosopher and scholar dedicated to the Philosophy of Right. Known as the theoretician of the Chilean "social right-wing", Herrera works as a professor at the Schools of Law of the Diego Portales University (UDP) and the University of Valparaíso (UV).
A former member of the Independent Democratic Union (UDI) from 1993 to 1997,[1] Herrera is identified with centre-right politics, but proclaims to being distant from the neoliberal ideas[1] of Milton Friedman and the Chicago Boys. He has been described as "one of the most lucid and enlightened intellectuals from the Chilean right today".[2] He has also been classified by the libertarian Axel Kaiser as being close in thought to Chilean nationalism,[3] but Herrera prefers to pigeonhole himself into a "national-popular tradition", and within which he mainly rescues works of Alberto Edwards or historians like Francisco Antonio Encina and Mario Góngora.
In 2015 he was an independent member of the Political Committee of Chile Vamos, a centre-right coalition whose then leader was Sebastián Piñera.[4] Nevertheless, he has criticized his own coalition for its "lack of political vision" related, according him, to the prevalence of economic discourse over any other.[5] One of the politicians whom he has influenced in the coalition is Mario Desbordes of Renovación Nacional (RN),[6] although Desbordes does not recognize himself as being grounded in Herrera's theory.[7] This influence became notorious after the Estallido Social (Social Outbreak; 2019–20 protests), where Desbordes was a key politician in the November 15th agreement[8] to "Approve"[9] [10] [11] a new constitution in the plebiscite to replace the 1980 constitution.
Herrera is a member of the board of several scientific journals, including the University of Valparaíso Journal of Social Sciences. He is a regular columnist in various Chilean press media, specifically the newspapers La Tercera,[12] La Segunda,[13] El Mercurio,[14] and El Mostrador.[15]
Born in Vina del Mar, he attended Sagrados Corazones School during his primary education and the high school. Once graduated, he decided to study laws at University of Valparaíso (UV), joining to that institution in 1992. He obtained his Bachelor of Arts in May 1998 after approving his thesis entitled «Fin, virtudes y ley en la 'Suma contra Gentiles». It was supervised by the scholar Joaquín García-Huidobro Correa. Then, in 2004, he obtained his PhD at the University of Würzburg.
During his spell at the university, he was secretary general of the UV Students Federation (FEUV) from 1994 to 1995. There, he was a member UDI Youth until 1998, year which he distanced from them due to his growing "ideological distance from the party and its neoliberal discourse".[1]
In 2005, when he ended his term in Würzburg, his doctoral thesis titled German: Sein und Staat. Die ontologische Begründung der politischen Praxis bei Helmut Kuhn was released.