Maj-Inger Klingvall

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Maj-Inger Klingvall
Klingvall at Nordic Forum in Malmö, Sweden in June 2014
Minister of Health and Social Affairs
In office
29 October 1998 – 16 November 1998
Prime MinisterGöran Persson
Preceded byAnders Sundström
Succeeded byLars Engqvist
Minister for International Development Cooperation
In office
14 September 1999 – 16 November 2001
Prime MinisterGöran Persson
Preceded byPierre Schori
Succeeded byJan O. Karlsson
Minister for Migration
In office
14 September 1999 – 16 November 2001
Prime MinisterGöran Persson
Preceded byPierre Schori
Succeeded byJan O. Karlsson
Personal details
Born (1946-05-15) 15 May 1946 (age 77)
Nyköping, Sweden
Political partySocial Democratic Party

Maj-Inger Klingvall (born 15 May 1946) is a Swedish

Minister for Migration
. She was statsråd (a title for members of the Swedish government) from 1996 to 2002.

Biography

Klingvall was born in Nyköping to Sven Ohlsson and Elsa Karlsson, and married Rolf Klingvall in 1967.[1]

Klingvall became a bachelor of arts at Stockholm University in 1970 and a master's of social science degree at Linköping University in 1972.

She worked as a secretary at Östergötland County Council 1973–1975 and then at

City Council from 1977 to 1996. From 1986 to 1988 she was a municipal politician as a member of the municipal board and first vice chairman of the social committee with special responsibility for child, individual and family care.[2] Klingvall was a member of the Riksdag for Östergötland County constituency from 1988 to 2002.[3] She was a member of the Committee on Social Insurance 1991–1994 and chair of the Committee on Health and Welfare 1994–1996. She has also been a deputy in the Committee on Civil Law and the Committee on Cultural Affairs and a member of the War Delegation
.

Klingvall was Minister of State in the

Ministry for Foreign Affairs 1999–2001. For a short period after Margot Wallström's resignation in 1998, she was acting Health minister
.

Klingvall was a board member of the Social Democratic Women in Sweden from 1975 and sat on the union's executive committee 1984–1995.[2] She was a member of the Swedish Social Democratic Party board from 1990 and sat on the executive committee from 1996 to 2001.

She chose to leave the government in November 2001 after the Social Democratic Party Congress did not give her renewed confidence in the party's executive committee.[4][2]

In 2010, Klingvall together with Gabriele Winai Ström published a book about female Swedish diplomats entitled Från Myrdal till Lindh: svenska diplomatprofiler.[4]

Maj-Inger Klingvall was married to Rolf Klingvall, from 1967, but they later divorced.[2][4]

References

  1. ^ "Klingvall, Maj-Inger". Vem är hon (in Swedish). 1988. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d "610 (Vem är det : Svensk biografisk handbok / 1997)". runeberg.org (in Swedish). Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  3. ^ "Maj-Inger Klingvall (S)". riksdagen.se (in Swedish). Sveriges Riksdag. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Nu satsar Maj-Inger på att ha kul, Norrköpings Tidningar, 2011-05-16
Political offices
Preceded by
Minister for Health and Social Affairs

1998
Succeeded by