Giovanna Roa | |
|---|---|
| |
| Member of the Constitutional Convention | |
| In office 4 July 2021 –4 July 2022 | |
| Constituency | 10th District |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 20 November 1986 |
| Party | Frente Amplio Democratic Revolution |
| Alma mater | Pontifical Catholic University of Chile |
| Profession | Designer |
Giovanna Roa Cadin (born 20 November 1986) is a Chilean designer and politician. [1]
She served as a member of the Constitutional Convention,representing the 10th electoral district of the Santiago Metropolitan Region. [1] [2] [3]
Roa Cadin was born on 20 November 1986 in Santiago. [1] She is the daughter of Carlos Osvaldo Roa Valenzuela and Liliana Carla Cadin Cella. [1]
She completed her primary and secondary education at Colegio Sagrados Corazones de Niñas in Providencia,graduating in 2004. [1] She pursued higher education at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile between 2005 and 2011,qualifying as a designer. [1]
Between April 2014 and July 2016,she served as chief of staff of the National Health Fund (FONASA). [1] Since 2018,she has worked as an associate researcher at the Organizational Engineering Center of the Department of Industrial Engineering at the University of Chile. [1]
Roa Cadin began his career in the Democratic Revolution (RD) party. [1] In 2010,she served as vice president of the Student Federation of the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (FEUC),participating in the student movement. [1] She is co-director of the feminist cultural platform Ruidosa. [1]
In the 2017 presidential elections,she was executive director of the presidential campaign of candidate Beatriz Sánchez. [1] In the same year,she participated in the founding of the Broad Front coalition. [1] She also served as a parliamentary advisor to RD deputy Maite Orsini. [1]
In the elections held on 15–16 May 2021,she ran as a candidate for the Constitutional Convention representing the 10th electoral district of the Santiago Metropolitan Region as a member of RD within the Apruebo Dignidad electoral pact, [4] receiving 3,875 votes (0.91% of the validly cast votes). [1]