Laurens Jan Brinkhorst
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Laurens Jan Brinkhorst (born March 18, 1937) is a Dutch D66 politician.
Brinkhorst has been an undersecretary of state of foreign affairs and a minister of agriculture. Furthermore he has presided the D66-group at the Second Chamber of the Dutch parliament. He was also a minister of economical affairs in the second Balkenende cabinet. Journalists gave him the nickname Brilly the kid.
He is also the father of the Dutch princess Laurentien Brinkhorst, who married Prince Constantijn.
Laurens-Jan Brinkhorst was born in the city of Zwolle. After getting his college diploma (gymnasium-B-diploma at Dutch) he studied law at the University of Leiden (Rijksuniversiteit Leiden in Dutch) (doctoral exam in 1959). He got his M.A. in Public Law and Government at Columbia University in New York. Afterwards he worked at Shearman & Sterling in New York.
From 1962, and from 1965 as a director, he worked at the Europe-institute at the Rijksuniversiteit Leiden where he became a lector in 1965 as well. In the period 1967-1973 he was a professor at the University of Groningen (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen in Dutch). On May 11, 1973 he became Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Cabinet of Den Uyl.
In 1977 he was again a member of the Second Chamber of the Dutch parliament for D66 and in 1981 even as chairman of his party's parliament fraction. From 1983-1987 he was Ambassador of the European Community in Japan.
In 1994 Brinkhorst became a member of the European Parliament, serving there until 1999.
Brinkhorst was also a member of the Provinciale Staten (the provincial parliament) of the province of Groningen for D66, a member of the board of advice of the World Recources Institute in Washington DC, a member of the board of governors of the Nederlands Economisch Instituut (Dutch Economical Institute), a professor by special appointment of international environmental law at the University of Leiden, a member of the Board of Directors of the Salzburg Seminar, a member of the Board of Directors of the International Institute of Sustaineble Development, and a professor (on a temporary basis) of international environmental law at the University of Lausanne.
On the 8th of June 1999 he became the minister of agriculture, environmental control and fishery in the cabinet Kok-II. Afterwards (2002) he became an Adviser of European Affairs at NautaDulith in Brussels and was awarded a professorship in transnational and European Governance at the University of Tilburg. After the electoral defeat of D66 he became a minister of economic affairs in the second Balkenende cabinet. Brinkhorst, as well as Alexander Pechtold, resigned from his minister post after the second Balkenende cabinet came in crisis on June 29, 2006. The next day, Balkenende offered the resignation of the full cabinet to the Dutch Queen.
Preceded by Annemarie Jorritsma |
Dutch Minister of Economic Affairs May 27, 2003–July 3, 2006 |
Succeeded by Joop Wijn |
Preceded by — |
Dutch Deputy Prime Minister March 31, 2005–July 3, 2006 |
Succeeded by — |