Alejandra Alicia Flores Carlos (born 10 March 1961, Pica, Chile) is a Chilean Spanish-language teacher and independent politician of Aymara origin.
She served as a member of the Constitutional Convention of Chile, representing the District 2 of the Tarapacá Region.
Flores Carlos was born on 10 March 1961 in Pica, Tarapacá Region. She belongs to the Aymara people and is the daughter of AgustÃÂn Flores Apala and Petronila Alicia Carlos.
She completed her secondary education at the Liceo de Niñas Elena Duvauchelle in Iquique. She obtained a degree as a Spanish-language teacher from the University of Tarapacá. She holds a masterâÂÂs degree in Social Sciences with a specialization in ethnic studies from FLACSO Ecuador, and has postgraduate diplomas in Intercultural Health and in Planning and Management for Indigenous Development.
Since 2007, she has served as Regional Coordinator for Health and Indigenous Peoples at the Ministry of Health in the Tarapacá Region. She has also worked as a project supervisor at the National Corporation for Indigenous Development (CONADI) and as head of Intercultural Education, Culture and Health for the OrÃÂgenes Program, implemented by MIDEPLAN and the Inter-American Development Bank.
Flores Carlos is an independent politician and a member of the National Association of Rural and Indigenous Women (ANAMURI). She has been active as a social leader for approximately thirty years, with participation in student movements and health workersâ organizations.
In the elections held on 15 and 16 May 2021, she ran as an independent candidate for the Constitutional Convention representing District 2 of the Tarapacá Region, as part of the âÂÂIndependientes de Tarapacáâ electoral pact. She received 3,758 votes, corresponding to 4.78% of the validly cast votes.
During the ConventionâÂÂs regulatory phase, she served on the Commission on Popular Participation and Territorial Equity. She later joined the Thematic Commission on Political System, Legislative Power and Electoral System, as well as the Commission on Indigenous Peoplesâ Rights and Plurinationality.