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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Education  





2 Professional career  





3 Political career  



3.1  Secretary of State for Gender Equality  





3.2  Minister Delegate in charge of Citizenship  







4 Works  





5 Controversy  





6 Personal life  





7 See also  





8 References  














Marlène Schiappa






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Marlène Schiappa
Schiappa in 2019
State Secretary for the Social and Solidarity Economy and Associative Life
In office
4 July 2022 – 20 July 2023
PresidentEmmanuel Macron
Prime MinisterÉlisabeth Borne
Preceded byOlivia Grégoire (portfolio renamed)
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Minister Delegate in charge of Citizenship
In office
6 July 2020 – 20 May 2022
PresidentEmmanuel Macron
Prime MinisterJean Castex
MinisterGérald Darmanin
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded bySonia Backès
Secretary of State for Gender Equality
In office
17 May 2017 – 6 July 2020
PresidentEmmanuel Macron
Prime MinisterÉdouard Philippe
Preceded byLaurence Rossignol (portfolio renamed)
Succeeded byElisabeth Moreno (portfolio renamed)
Personal details
Born (1982-11-18) 18 November 1982 (age 41)
Paris, France
Political partyLa République En Marche!
Spouse

Cédric Brugière

(m. 2006)
Children2 daughters
EducationUniversity of Grenoble

Marlène Schiappa (French pronunciation: [maʁlɛn ʃjapa]; born 18 November 1982) is a French writer and politician who served as State Secretary for the Social and Solidarity Economy and Associative Life, attached to the Prime Minister, in the Borne government (2022-2023), as Minister Delegate in charge of Citizenship, attached to the Minister of the Interior, in the governmentofPrime Minister Jean Castex (2020–2022)[1] and as Secretary of State for Gender Equality in the governmentofPrime Minister Édouard Philippe (2017–2020).[2]

Ultimately, Schiappa was sacked from government in July 2023 as part of a cabinet reshuffle, a dismissal linked to the ongoing political scandal surrounding the "Marianne Fund" to combat Islamist extremism, a fund she set up as junior minister in 2021, and whose handling came under public and parliamentary scrutiny in 2023.

Education[edit]

Schiappa attended Lycée Claude-Bernard in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, where she obtained her Baccalauréat ES. She studied Geography at the Sorbonne for a year.[3] She took evening class in communications and earned a bachelor's degree validated by the University of Grenoble.[4] On 24 January 2024 she announced on LinkedIn that she was joining Emlyon Business School as a student.[5]

Professional career[edit]

In 2007, Schiappa started working at the advertising company Euro RSCG, the same year she founded the online magazine "Les Pasionarias". In 2008 she set up a blog for working mothers called "Maman travaille" (Mummy works), following the blog success she set up a support network for working mothers to put together proposals for changes in politics. After the birth of her first daughter, she left advertising and began writing novels on the theme of motherhood and feminism, some of the most successful books were: Letters To My Uterus and Who Are The Rapists.[6] She moved to Le Mans in northwestern France.[7]

Political career[edit]

In 2014 Schiappa was elected deputy mayor of the city of Le Mans, in charge of gender equality and discriminations, a position she held until 2017. In 2015 she met Emmanuel Macron, then minister of the economy, at a technology event, gifting him her book Plafond de mère,[6] a few weeks later he asked her to participate in a conference about gender equality and politics.[7]

In 2014 she co-founded the Movement of French Elected Officials for Equality (MEFE). From 2016 to 2017, Shiappa became delegate advisor to technological innovation and economic attractiveness of the territory. In 2016 she also served as an advisor to Laurence Rossignol (Minister of Families, Childhood and Woman's rights) in the governmentofPrime Minister Manuel Valls.[citation needed]

In 2016–17, Schiappa was delegate to the departmentofSarthe in charge of gender equality for La République En Marche! as well as member of its national Investiture Committee.[citation needed]

Secretary of State for Gender Equality[edit]

In 2017, Schiappa became Secretary of State for Gender Equality attached to the Prime Minister.[8]

In 2018, Schiappa successfully introduced a law to deter predatory remarks and street harassment, such as wolf-whistling.[9][10] In 2018, she proposed a change to the French civil code to introduce a ban on corporal punishment; the bill called "anti-smacking bill" in the media was approved on 30 November 2018.[11]

On the eve of International Women's Day in 2018, Schiappa appeared, alongside Roselyne Bachelot among others, in a performance of Eve Ensler's Vagina Monologues at the Bobino theater in Paris.[12]

In 2019, amid revelations of the Jeffrey Epstein affair, Schiappa and fellow cabinet member child welfare minister, Adrien Taquet called for an investigation into the activities in France of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein "so that his death does not deny his victims the justice they are entitled to".[13][14]

In November 2019, Schiappa proposed that foreigners convicted of sexual crimes and violence against women would be deported. This proposal was criticised by some feminists who called it "feminationalism" and unequal punishment based on nationality,[15] and also by a legal expert who said that such measures already existed since 1970 for serious crimes including the worst sexual crimes.[16]

Minister Delegate in charge of Citizenship[edit]

On 6 July 2020, Schiappa was appointed Minister Delegate in charge of Citizenship, attached to the Minister of the Interior, in the government of Prime Minister Jean Castex.[17]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in France, in September 2020, Schiappa announced that foreign health workers would be fast-tracked to obtain French citizenship.[18]

Works[edit]

Schiappa has published more than 28 novels and essays under her name as well as under the pseudonym Marie Minelli.[citation needed]

Controversy[edit]

In early 2023, an investigation by two French news outlets accused the Fonds Marianne, an anti-radicalism fund Schiappa set up in 2021 to promote French Republican values and fight online extremism and that she supervised, of very lax oversight.[19]

In April 2023, Schiappa caused controversy when she appeared on the cover of the Playboy magazine's French edition, wearing a low-cut white dress [20] while the country is undergoing civil unrest.

Personal life[edit]

Schiappa grew up in a multiracial council estate north of Paris,[6] she is the daughter of Jean-Marc Schiappa, a historian and Catherine Marchi, a Vice-principalinDijon.[21] Schiappa has two sisters. After a short marriage in 2001, she married Cédric Bruguière in 2006, they have two daughters together.[22] She has a brown beltinjudo.[7] In 2015, Schiappa declared she is sapiosexual.[23]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  • ^ "Marlène Schiappa". Gouvernement.fr (in French). 20 March 2018.
  • ^ "Marlene SCHIAPPA BRUGUIERE". Copains d'avant (in French). 13 January 2020.
  • ^ "Découvrez les diplômes des ministres du gouvernement Édouard Philippe". Le Figaro Etudiant (in French). 17 May 2017.
  • ^ "Reconversion : après ses passages au gouvernement, Marlène Schiappa devient… étudiante en école de commerce". Marianne (in French). 24 January 2024.
  • ^ a b c Marsh, Stefanie (24 June 2017). "'€5,000 would be a deterrent': the French minister who wants sexual harassment fines". the Guardian.
  • ^ a b c Match, Paris (8 March 2018). "Marlène Schiappa et Cédric Bruguière: l'amour en toute égalité". parismatch.com (in French).
  • ^ "Décret du 24 novembre 2017 relatif à la composition du Gouvernement". Légifrance1 (in French).
  • ^ Richard Lough (2 August 2018) France outlaws lewd cat-calls to women in public amid attack uproar Reuters.
  • ^ Emmanuel Jarry and Brian Love (25 September 2018) Man who slapped woman's bottom gets first fine under new French 'cat-call' law Reuters.
  • ^ Elizabeth Pineau (30 November 2018) Overturning Napoleon-era rights, France bans smacking kids Reuters.
  • ^ Anne-Sylvaine Chassany (16 March 2018) Agent provocateur: Marlène Schiappa wages France's gender war Financial Times.
  • ^ Victor Mallet (23 August 2019), France launches inquiry into Epstein affair Financial Times.
  • ^ Aurelien Breeden (23 August 2019), Paris Prosecutor Opens Investigation in Jeffrey Epstein Scandal New York Times.
  • ^ "TRIBUNE. "Le discours fémonationaliste indigne de Marlène Schiappa"". Le Journal de Dimanche (in French). 14 July 2020. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  • ^ Conge, Paul (20 July 2020). "Expulsion des étrangers coupables de violences sexuelles : qu'a réellement "obtenu" Marlène Schiappa ?". Marianne (in French). Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  • ^ "Décret du 26 juillet 2020 relatif à la composition du Gouvernement". Légifrance (in French).
  • ^ Willsher, Kim (15 September 2020). "Foreign Covid workers in France to be fast-tracked for nationality". the Guardian.
  • ^ Eloi Passot (6 April 2023), Fonds Marianne: les ex-dirigeants d'une association soupçonnés d'avoir détourné une partie de l'argent à leur profit Le Figaro.
  • ^ Catherine Porter (6 April 2023),A French Minister Posed (Clothed) in Playboy. People Are Talking. New York Times.
  • ^ Passelac, Anouk (8 March 2018). "La mère de Marlène Schiappa, proviseure adjointe à Dijon, organise la Journée des droits des femmes". France 3 Bourgogne-Franche-Comté (in French).
  • ^ Match, Paris (9 December 2020). "Marlène Schiappa, femme d'Intérieur". parismatch.com (in French).
  • ^ Rose, Hilary. "'Sapiosexual' Marlène Schiappa prefers intelligence to looks? Oh là là". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 18 February 2023.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marlène_Schiappa&oldid=1226481412"

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