Fausto Alvarado


Fausto Alvarado was a Peruvian lawyer, politician and historian. He was Congressman of the Republic and Minister of Justice.

Biography

He studied high school at Leoncio Prado Military Academy. He then entered the Faculty of Law and Political Science of the National University of San Marcos. He received a lawyer and graduated from a degree. He obtained his master's degree in Economics from the Universidad del Pacífico and his master's degree in History with a major in Andean Studies from the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru. He later received a PhD in History of the Americas from the Pablo de Olavide University of Seville.
He was a member of the Solidarity and Democracy party, of which he was president. He nominated the Chamber of Deputies in the general elections of 1990, being elected as Deputy of the Republic by Lima Provinces; however, his parliamentary work was interrupted by the closure of Congress in April 1992.
Then he joined the Independent Moralizing Front led by Fernando Olivera Vega. In the 2001 general election he was elected Congressman of the Republic with 39,341 votes. As such, he presided over the Irregular Influence Investigation Commission exercised during the administration of Alberto Fujimori over the Judiciary, the Public Ministry and other State Powers and Institutions related to the Administration of Justice.
On 27 July 2002, he was appointed Minister of Justice by President Alejandro Toledo; as such, he carried out a modernization of the justice sector, among his achievements the awarding in favor of the General Archive of the Nation of the old post office of the Central Post, the issuance of the Criminal Procedure Code, the creation of CERIAJUS, the elaboration of the National Penitentiary Treatment Plan and the Recommendations for Legal Physical Sanitation and Informal Property Titling. As well as the signing of the UN International Convention for the fight against corruption.
In February 2004, he resigned from the position of Minister of Justice, after which he returned to his work as a parliamentarian, being elected First Vice President of Congress in the period 2005–2006.
In the 2011 Peruvian general election, he participated in the technical team of Possible Peru of Alejandro Toledo.

Works