Stephanie Krisper

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Stephanie Krisper (2018)

Stephanie Krisper (born May 24, 1980 in Vienna ) is an Austrian lawyer and politician ( NEOS ). Krisper worked as a human rights expert for the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Human Rights in Vienna. She has been a member of the Austrian National Council since November 2017 .

education and profession

Stephanie Krisper was born on May 24, 1980 and attended the St. Ursula High School in Vienna, where she passed her Matura with distinction in 1998 . She then began studying law at the Law Faculty of the University of Vienna in September 1998 . This study concluded Krisper in March 2003 with the graduation to the Master of law (Mag. Iur.) From. In the meantime, she spent an Erasmus year at the Panthéon-Assas University in Paris from September 2001 to June 2002 . From 2003 to 2004, Stephanie Krisper completed a postgraduate master’s degree at the European Center for Human Rights and Democratization in Venice , where she obtained a European Master in Human Rights and Democratization (E.MA). From September 2007 to June 2012, Krisper also completed her doctoral degree in law at the University of Vienna, where she was awarded a doctorate in law (Dr. iur.) With a dissertation on “The European Union's Safe Country Concepts versus the Principle of Non-Refoulement ” . ) was awarded a doctorate .

In addition to a number of legal internships at law firms and human rights NGOs (including as a voluntary legal advisor for asylum seekers), Krisper worked, among other things, for the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs in its human rights department at the representation at the United Nations in Geneva, at the UN refugee commissioner , the delegation the European Commission at the United Nations in Geneva as well as for commissions of the Human Rights Council and the Ombudsman Board as a torture prevention mechanism. From January 2009 until her inauguration in the National Council in November 2017, Stephanie Krisper most recently worked as a human rights expert with a focus on torture prevention at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Human Rights in Vienna.

Political career

Stephanie Krisper has been a member of the NEOS - Das Neue Österreich party since 2012 . After she had already stood as a candidate in the 2013 National Council election, she also applied for a place on the list in the 2017 National Council election in the intra-party primaries. It was finally voted 13th on the NEOS federal list and third on the NEOS provincial list for Vienna. After the party was finally able to achieve two basic mandates in the electoral district of Vienna and the first place winner, Beate Meinl-Reisinger , had renounced her mandate in order to continue to be active in the Vienna state parliament and local council, Krisper moved up to the second basic mandate. She was sworn in as a member of the National Council for the first time on November 9, 2017.

In November 2019 it became known that, as part of the BVT affair on May 10, 2019, the Federal Office for the Prevention and Fight against Corruption tried to have Krisper's mobile phone confiscated in order to identify their informants. The device of Die Presse journalist Anna Thalhammer was also supposed to be confiscated. The public prosecutor's office in Vienna rejected these requests at the beginning of July.

Private life

Stephanie Krisper is married, has three children and lives with her family in Vienna.

Publications

Web links

Commons : Stephanie Krisper  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Stephanie Krisper's curriculum vitae on the Respekt.net website
  2. a b Neos club boss Meinl-Reisinger remains on the Vienna City Council. In: derStandard.at . October 19, 2017. Retrieved October 19, 2017 .
  3. Dr. Stephanie Krisper, biography. Retrieved November 23, 2019 .
  4. Iris Bonavida: The Neos were her hobby. In: diePresse.com . November 3, 2017. Retrieved November 3, 2017 .
  5. Fabian Schmid: Investigators also wanted access to journalists' cell phones . In: The Standard . November 15, 2015, p. 7 ( Online [accessed November 15, 2019]).
  6. ^ "An attack on the freedom of the press" . In: The press . November 15, 2015, p.  5 ( Online [accessed November 15, 2019]).