Miguel Cocco

Miguel Cocco

General Director of Customs of the Dominican Republic
In office
16 August 2004 – 26 May 2009
PresidentLeonel Fernández
Preceded byVicente Sánchez Baret
Succeeded byRafael Camilo
In office
16 August 1996 – 16 August 2000
PresidentLeonel Fernández
Succeeded byVicente Sánchez Baret
Personal details
Born21 August 1946
Died20 May 2009 (aged 62)
CitizenshipDominican
Party Partido de la Liberación Dominicana (PLD)
SpouseAura Minerva González Tabar
Children4
Alma materUniversidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo
ProfessionSociólogo

Miguel Salvador Cocco Guerrero (August 21, 1946 – May 20, 2009) was a Dominican businessman and politician.[1]

Born in Santiago; his parents Manuel A. Cocco and Gisela Guerrero moved with him to Santo Domingo when he was at an early age. He began his studies at La Salle Catholic College in 1956, where from an early age he excelled as student academic laurels meritorio. Cocco graduated with academic laurels with a degree in Sociology from the Faculty of Economics and Social Sciences of the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo (UASD), Cocco, then worked at the institution as a teacher and researcher, where he co-founded the Center for the Study of Dominican Social Reality (CERESD).

Ancestors of Miguel Cocco
16. Tomás de Cocco Díaz Bustamante (1805–1863)
8. Manuel Antonio Cocco Alum (1854–1931)
17. Dolores Alum (1818–1873)
4. Salvador Augusto Cocco Pastoriza (1892–1995)
18. Andrés Pastoriza Hafsell
9. Catalina ‘Catrina’ Pastoriza Ureña (1857–1947)
19. Eulogia Ureña Castillo
2. Manuel Augusto Cocco Batlle (1918–)
20. Jaime Batlle Amat
10. José Joaquín Batlle Filbá (1844–1899)
21. Rosa Filbá Villardell
5. María del Carmen Batlle Espaillat (1890–1971)
22. Ulises Francisco Espaillat Quiñones (1823–1878)
11. María Dolores ‘Lola’ Espaillat Espaillat (1853–1936)
23. Eloísa Espaillat Rodríguez (1818–1919)
1. Miguel Salvador Cocco Guerrero (1946–2009)
6. Miguel Ángel Guerrero
3. Gisela Guerrero Dujarric (1928–)
28. Luis Jerónimo Dujarric López (1828–?)
14. Pedro Antonio Dujarric Perdomo (1856–?)
29. María Dolores Perdomo Luna (1810–1880)
7. María Dujarric Quesada (1896–?)
30. José Dolores Quezada Castro
15. Altagracia Inés Quesada Chaves (1862–?)
31. Rosalía Chaves

References

Notes
  1. ^ ""Muere Miguel Cocco Guerrero" |". Israelvalenzuela.com. 2009-05-20. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
Bibliography