Dag Bo Gustaf Helin

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His Excellency
Dag Bo Gustaf Helin
Head of Social Services and the Labour Market Administration
Secretary and Department Director General of Stockholm
In office
28 February 2006 – 28 February 2009
MonarchCarl XVI Gustaf
Prime MinisterFredrik Reinfeldt
Head of Stockholm’s Social Services
Director of the Headquarter of the Department of Social Services
In office
1 January 2002 – 28 February 2006
MonarchCarl XVI Gustaf
Prime MinisterGöran Persson
ConstituencyStockholm
Deputy Director of Social Services in Maria-Högalid and Sköndal
In office
1 January 1996 – 1 January 2002
MonarchCarl XVI Gustaf
Prime MinisterGöran Persson
Personal details
SpouseEva Christina Lundin
Parents
Profession
  • Bureaucrat
  • Politician
Military service
Branch/service
  • Social Services
  • Labour Market Administration

Dag Bo Gustaf Helin is a Swedish bureaucrat and politician. He is the tenth patriarch of the Helin family and the fourth of the Helin Hexad.

Biography[edit]

Helin is the second son of Inga Karin Emilia Engwall and Bo Henrik Gustaf Helin.[1] He is the brother of diplomat and politician Inger Marianne Helin; engineer Connie Lilly Helin; Electrolux executive Denis Bo Gustaf Helin; lector Gun Henriette Helin; and diplomat and bureaucrat Greger Johan Gustaf Helin.

In the 1990s, Helin was the Director of Social Services in Maria-Högalid. He was appointed as Director of Social Servicesin Sköndal in 1996.[2] He was appointed Director of Social Services and The Labour Market Administration. He was a major contributor to establishing the modern Swedish Child Protective Services.[3] He held the opinion that police and Social Services should be separated.[3] He was appointed Director of Stockholms Social Services. He exposed sexual abuse and sexual trade within government agencies in 2005.[4] He was an outspoken critic of the Swedish Migration Agency in relation to abuse against assailants.[5] In 2007, he actively scrutinized the Swedish government for turning a blind eye to corruption within the police force following the arrest of Göran Linberg or “Kapten Klänning” (Captain Dress), a police chief that later was exposed as a serial rapist.[6] In 2009, Dag Helin resigned without formal notice.[7] In June 2009, he stated in an article published by SVT that “no reason was given to as to why he should resign”.[7] Today the circumstances  behind the resignation are still uncertain. Helin married Eva Christina Lundin (b. 1947) in 1976.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Engwall, Thorsten (1 February 2002). Släkten Engwall, register över släkten Engwall upprättat 1 febuari 2002. Strålins Gävle: Engwalls släktfond. pp. 37–115.
  2. ^ "Lokala toppar byter plats". DN.SE (in Swedish). 1996-01-16. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  3. ^ a b "Socialtjänstens åtgärder för unga som begår brott Svar på skrivelse från Ann-Katrin Åslund (fp) och Abit Dundar (fp) (1 bilaga) [Samverkan mellan polis och socialtjänst]".
  4. ^ "Migrationsverket får hård kritik". Dagen (in Swedish). 2005-12-02. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  5. ^ TT (2005-12-02). "Hård kritik mot Migrationsverket". Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). ISSN 1101-2412. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  6. ^ Radio, Sveriges (2020-05-07). "Kapten Klänning – P3 Dokumentär - P3 Dokumentär". sverigesradio.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  7. ^ a b Nyheter, S. V. T. (2009-06-15). "Dag Helin avgår utan formell uppsägning". SVT Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved 2023-06-20.