Marlène Schiappa

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Marlène Schiappa at the UN Commission on the Status of Women (2019)

Marlène Schiappa (pronunciation: [maʁlɛn ʃjapa] ; born November 18, 1982 in Paris ) is a French politician ( LREM ) and author . From May 2017 to July 2020 she was State Secretary for Equality between Women and Men; since then she has been Assistant Minister for Citizenship.

Origin, education, family

Schiappa is the daughter of the historian Jean-Marc Schiappa and the headmistress Catherine Marchi, who used to be a feminist and trade unionist herself. Both parents were Trotskyists . The family comes from Corsica . From the age of 13 she lived with her sister with her father.

After completing her baccalaureate at the Lycée Claude-Bernard in Paris , she began to study geography at the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne , but dropped out after a year. Instead, she graduated with a degree in communications and new media.

She has been married to Cédric Bruguière for the second time since 2006, with whom she has two children.

activities

From 2005, Schiappa worked in the new media area at the Euro RSCG advertising agency .

Maman travaille

Marlène Schiappa is the founder and chairwoman of the Maman travaille network (“Mama works”). It grew out of a blog that Marlène Schiappa founded in 2008. The rapid success with around 8,000 visits per day was the reason to found an association in 2008. Topics are the equality of parents and, above all, the compatibility of professional and personal life .

As an author

Schiappa has written numerous publications on equality between women and men and feminism .

In 2014 she published her first novel: Pas plus de 4 heures de sommeil (“No more than 4 hours of sleep”). The book was published in German under the title Who needs sleep? published and sold the film rights.

Her second novel, Marianne est déchaînée (2015), tells of her first year as the holder of a local office in the form of a key novel .

Starting in 2011, Schiappa also published books on erotic topics under the pseudonym "Marie Minelli".

Political career

Marlène Schiappa, State Secretary for Gender Equality (2017)

In the local elections in March 2014, Schiappa was elected to the Le Mans local council on the Parti socialiste (PS) list. Mayor Jean-Claude Boulard (PS) appointed her as his alderman responsible for equality and the fight against discrimination. She held this office until September 2017. She kept her seat on the Le Mans City Council until July 2020.

She supported Emmanuel Macron in the 2017 presidential election . After his election victory, Schiappa was appointed State Secretary for Equality between Women and Men (Secrétaire d'État chargée de l'Égalité entre les femmes et les hommes) in the Philippe I cabinet in May 2017 . Macron also appointed Schiappa to the committee that selected the candidates from the La République en Marche party (LREM), which he founded, for the subsequent parliamentary election.

She kept the post of State Secretary for Gender Equality in the Philippe II cabinet until July 2020. Schiappa initiated a “law to strengthen the fight against sexual and sexist violence”, which came into force on August 3, 2018 and is also known as Loi Schiappa for short becomes. This introduced the criminal offense of sexist insult and defined sexual intercourse with people under the age of 16 as rape. From October 2018 she was also responsible for the fight against discrimination (la Lutte contre les discriminations) . In the LREM party, Marlène Schiappa took over the leadership of the "Debate on Ideas" department at the beginning of 2019.

In July 2020, after a government reshuffle in the cabinet of Jean Castex , she took over the newly created office of Assistant Minister for Citizenship to the Minister of the Interior (Ministre déléguée auprès du ministre de l'Intérieur, chargée de la Citoyenneté) . In this position she reports to Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin .

Works

  • J'aime ma famille , illustrations de Pacco (Robert Laffont et Marabout, 2010)
  • Osez l'amour des rondes (La Musardine, 2010)
  • Maman travaille, le guide (First, 2011)
  • Je reprends le travail après bébé (Tournez la page, 2012)
  • Le Dictionnaire déjanté de la maternité (Michalon, 2013)
  • Éloge de l'enfant roi (Bourin, 2013)
  • Les 200 astuces de Maman travaille (Leducs, 2013)
  • Le Guide de grossesse de Maman travaille (Leducs, 2014)
  • Pas plus de 4 heures de sommeil (Roman; Stock, 2014). German translation: Who needs sleep? Berlin 2016. ISBN 978-3-8333-1031-7 . Excerpts can be viewed on Google Books ( books.google.ch ).
  • Avec Cédric Bruguière, J'arrête de m'épuiser (Eyrolles, 2015)
  • Marianne est déchaînée (Stock, 2016)
  • Femmes de candidats (Bourin, 2017)
  • Où sont les violeurs? Essai sur la culture du viol (L'Aube, 2017)
  • Les lendemains avaient un goût de miel (Charleston, 2017)

literature

Web links

Commons : Marlène Schiappa  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ La mère de Marlène Schiappa, proviseure adjointe à Dijon: “Je suis féministe depuis que j'ai une conscience”. Retrieved January 27, 2019 (FR-FR).
  2. ^ Romy Strassenburg: Absolute beginner. Marlène Schiappa, the youngest member of the Macron government, did not earn her spurs in elite schools, but on the Internet. In: Der Freitag , No. 01/2018, January 4, 2018.
  3. Marlène Schiappa, une blogueuse militante aux droits des femmes . In: Le Monde . May 17, 2017 ( lemonde.fr ).
  4. Marlène Schiappa, secrétaire d'État chargée de l'Égalité entre les femmes et les hommes . In: Le Figaro . May 17, 2017 ( lefigaro.fr ).
  5. MARLENE SCHIAPPA marraine du salon de l'édition 2014 ( Memento of November 18, 2014 in the web archive archive.today ), absolument-feminin.fr, 2014.
  6. Schiappa: Maman-travaille , francetvinfo.fr.
  7. Les femmes toute une histoire de Maman-travaille , franceinter.fr.
  8. ^ Jean-Baptiste Daoulas: Marlène Schiappa at-elle écrit des livres érotiques sous pseudo? In: L'Express , 7 July 2017.
  9. Barbara Krief: On a lu le dernier livre de Marlène Schiappa et il nous a mis bien mal à l'aise. In: L'Obs , May 26, 2018.
  10. Georg Blume : Minister Marlène Schiappa The woman whom the Macrons trust. In: Spiegel Online , June 16, 2018.
  11. Pour se relancer, La République en Marche se réorganise. Europe 1, January 23, 2019.
  12. Décret du 6 juillet 2020 relatif à la composition du Gouvernement . ( gouv.fr [accessed July 18, 2020]).
  13. Nadia Pantel: Demonstrations in France: "Rapists in prison, not in the government". In: Süddeutsche Zeitung (online), July 13, 2020.