Marie-Claude Gagné
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Marie-Claude Gagné
Marie-Claude is a feminine French given name. Notable people with the name include: *Marie-Claude Arnaud, French mathematician *Marie-Claude Asselin, Canadian freestyle skier *Marie-Claude Audet (born 1962), Canadian cyclist *Marie-Claude Beaud (born 1946), French museumist *Marie-Claude Beaudeau (born 1937), French politician *Marie-Claude Bibeau (born 1970), Canadian politician *Marie-Claude Bierre, French figure skater *Marie-Claude Blais, Canadian politician *Marie-Claude Bomsel (born 1946), French veterinarian *Marie-Claude Bourbonnais (born 1979), Canadian model *Marie-Claude Bouthillier, Canadian artist *Marie-Claude Chappuis (born 1969), Swiss operatic mezzo-soprano *Marie-Claude Deslières (born 1966), Canadian water polo player *Marie-Claude Dion, Canadian soccer player *Marie-Claude Doyon (born 1965), Canadian luger *Marie-Claude Gaudel, French mathematician and computer scientist *Marie-Claude Guigue (1832–1889), French historian *Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller, French-Ve ...
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Marie-Claude Arnaud
Marie-Claude Arnaud-Delabrière (born 24 February 1963) is a French mathematician, specializing in dynamical systems. She is University Professor of Mathematics at the University of Avignon and a senior member of the Institut Universitaire de France. Education and career Arnaud was a mathematics student at the École normale supérieure (Paris) from 1983 to 1987; she earned a bachelor's degree in 1984, an agrégation in 1985, and a diplôme d'études approfondies in 1986. She earned her doctorate in 1990 from Paris Diderot University under the supervision of Michael Herman (mathematician), Michael Herman, and completed a habilitation in 1999 at Paris-Sud University. After working as an assistant at Louis Pasteur University from 1987 to 1989, and then as a Attaché Temporaire d'Enseignement et de Recherche, temporary researcher at Paris Diderot University from 1989 to 1991, she became an assistant professor at Paris Diderot University in 1991. In 2001 she moved to Avignon as a full ...
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Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller
Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller is a Franco-Venezuelan anthropologist and ethnolinguist, professor of the Central University of Venezuela. She has published several works about the indigenous languages in Venezuela. Among the languages included in her works are the yanomamö idioms, panare, hodï The Hodï or Jotï (from the Hodï word for "people") are a small group of indigenous people of the Americas, indigenous people who live in the Amazon rainforest in Venezuela. The last census held in Venezuela, in 2011, registered 982 individuals ... and the yawarana. In 2009 Mattéi-Müller received the National Prize of Science and Technology, mention on Social Sciences, along Jacinto Serowe. References External linksMarie Claude Matthéi-Müller en proyecto de documentación de idiomas indígenas de la National Science Foundation Venezuelan women anthropologists French anthropologists French women anthropologists Venezuelan women scientists French women scientists Lingui ...
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Marie-Claude Vayssade
Marie-Claude Vayssade (8 August 1936 – 11 November 2020) was a French politician. She served on the European Parliament from 1979 to 1994 and was a member of the Socialist Party. Decorations *Commander of the Ordre national du Mérite The (; ) is a French order of merit with membership awarded by the President of the French Republic, founded on 3 December 1963 by President Charles de Gaulle. The reason for the order's establishment was twofold: to replace the large number of ... (2012) References 1936 births 2020 deaths Socialist Party (France) politicians {{France-politician-Socialist-stub ...
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Marie-Claude Vaillant-Couturier
Marie-Claude Vaillant-Couturier (; née Vogel; 3 November 1912 – 11 December 1996) was a French Resistance member in World War II as well as a photojournalist, deported to Auschwitz in 1943. She survived the war and became a Communist politician, elected to Parliament under the Fourth and Fifth Republic. Biography Photojournalist Vaillant-Couturier's father, Lucien Vogel was an editor who created '' Vu'' magazine in 1928. Her mother, Cosette de Brunhoff, whose brother Jean de Brunhoff created Babar the Elephant, was the first editor-in-chief of '' Vogue Paris''. Vaillant-Couturier became a photojournalist at a time when the trade was overwhelmingly male, which earned her the nickname of “the lady in Rolleiflex”. She joined the Association des Écrivains et Artistes Révolutionnaires (AEAR) and in 1934 the Mouvement Jeunes Communistes de France (MJCF), the Communist Youth Movement of France, as well as in 1936, the Union of the Girls of France. In 1934, she married P ...
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Marie-Claude Treilhou
Marie-Claude is a feminine French given name. Notable people with the name include: *Marie-Claude Arnaud, French mathematician * Marie-Claude Asselin, Canadian freestyle skier *Marie-Claude Audet (born 1962), Canadian cyclist * Marie-Claude Beaud (born 1946), French museumist *Marie-Claude Beaudeau (born 1937), French politician *Marie-Claude Bibeau (born 1970), Canadian politician * Marie-Claude Bierre, French figure skater *Marie-Claude Blais, Canadian politician * Marie-Claude Bomsel (born 1946), French veterinarian * Marie-Claude Bourbonnais (born 1979), Canadian model * Marie-Claude Bouthillier, Canadian artist * Marie-Claude Chappuis (born 1969), Swiss operatic mezzo-soprano * Marie-Claude Deslières (born 1966), Canadian water polo player * Marie-Claude Dion, Canadian soccer player * Marie-Claude Doyon (born 1965), Canadian luger * Marie-Claude Gaudel, French mathematician and computer scientist *Marie-Claude Guigue (1832–1889), French historian *Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller ...
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Marie-Claude Tjibaou
Marie-Claude Tjibaou is a former medal-winning athlete, Kanak activist and politician, and widow of the independence movement leader in New Caledonia, Jean-Marie Tjibaou. Early life Marie-Claude "Andie" Tjibaou was born Marie-Claude Wetta on 10 January 1949 in Ponérihouen on the north coast of Grand Terre, the main island of New Caledonia. She is a member of the Néouta tribe. Her father, Doui Matayo Wetta (1917–1980), was a founding member in 1947 of the ''Association des indigènes calédoniens et loyaltiens français'' (Association of Native Caledonians and French Loyalists – AICLF) and one of the first nine Melanesians to sit on the general council of the French territory of New Caledonia. He was Minister of Public Relations, Information, Basic Education and Cooperation from 1958 to 1962. Tjibaou was very athletic. She represented New Caledonia in the South Pacific Games, winning a gold medal in the shot put at the 1969 games in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea and the ...
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Marie-Claude Savard-Gagnon
Marie-Claude Savard-Gagnon (born July 12, 1972) is a Canadian former pair skater. With Luc Bradet, she won the gold medal at the 1997 Canadian Figure Skating Championships and competed at the 1998 Winter Olympics The 1998 Winter Olympics, officially known as the and commonly known as Nagano 1998 (), were a winter multi-sport event held from 7 to 22 February 1998, mainly in Nagano, Nagano, Nagano, Nagano Prefecture, Japan, with some events .... Marie-Claude Savard-Gagnon and her partner, Luc Bradet were the first Pair Skaters to attempt the Quad Throw Salchow at the 1991 Nation's Cup in Gelsenkirshen, Germany. Results (with Bradet) References 1972 births Canadian female pair skaters Figure skaters at the 1998 Winter Olympics Living people Olympic figure skaters for Canada Sportspeople from Quebec City 20th-century Canadian sportswomen {{Canada-figure-skating-bio-stub ...
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Marie-Claude Sandrin
Marie-Claude Sandrin (born December 1937, in Bordeaux) is a French writer. Biography Sandrin won the prix Cazes in 1967 for her first novel, ''La Forteresse de boue'', published by . Two other novels will be published by the same house: ''La Cendre d’un été'' (1971) and ''L’homme à chagrin'' (1980). Several critics have highlighted relationships with Chateaubriand, Mauriac, Gracq, whom Marie-Claude Sandrin considers to be her "family". Marie-Claude Sandrin also held a career in journalism and worked for twenty years in '' the Méridional'', as well as in numerous magazines. Works ; Novels *1967: ''La Forteresse de boue'', Buchet/Chastel *1971: ''La Cendre d’un été'', Buchet/Chastel *1980: ''L’Homme à chagrin'', Buchet/Chastel ; Essays *1980''Salut Baby'' dialogue between a mother and her teenage daughter, .Google bookLivres Hebdo, 1980/ref> *1991''Champions de Dieu'' recueil de témoignages de « rencontres avec Dieu » , Arléa Arléa is a French publ ...
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Marie-Claude Pietragalla
Marie-Claude Georgette Yvonne Pietragalla (born 2 February 1963 in Paris) is a French dancer and choreographer. Biography Pietragalla was born in Paris to a Corsican father and mother from Bordeaux. At 16, she joined the Ballet de l'Opera National de Paris and was named étoile on 22 December 1990 after the performance of Don Quixote in which she played the role of Kitri. In 1998, she was appointed to the leadership of the National Ballet of Marseille, where she remained five years. After a conflict, the dancers of the company obtained her resignation. She danced at the Opéra Bastille with Patrick Dupond the "Swan Lake" (1992) and "Les Variations d'Ulysse" (1995) under the direction of Jean-Claude Gallotta. In 1998 she received the Prix Benois de la Danse. In 2000 she appeared in a one-woman show "Don't look back", a solo performance created for her by Carolyn Carlson. In October that year she introduced the ballet ''Sakountala'' that evokes the internal struggle of the ...
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Marie-Claude Nichols
Marie-Claude Nichols (born December 5, 1973) is a Canadian politician born in Terrebonne, Quebec. Nichols was elected to the National Assembly of Quebec in the 2014 election. She represents the electoral district of Vaudreuil. She was re-elected MNA for Vaudreuil in 2018 despite a historic defeat for her party. However, her majority declined considerably, from 20,512 votes to 2,765. She was re-elected in the 2022 election, by a slim 576 vote margin. Expulsion from Liberal Party Shortly after being elected as a Liberal in 2022, she was expelled from caucus by party leader Dominique Anglade Dominique Anglade (born January 31, 1974) is a Canadian engineer, businesswoman and former politician who served as the leader of the Quebec Liberal Party and leader of the Opposition of Quebec from May 11, 2020 to December 1, 2022. She has se ... on October 27, 2022 for refusing the transport critic role. After her expulsion, she announced she would sit as an independent. On May 2, ...
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Marie-Claude Najm
Marie-Claude Najm (; born 6 April 1971) is a Lebanese academic who served as Minister of Justice from 2020 to 2021. Education and academic career Najm studied law at the Saint Joseph University in Beirut and continued her studies at the Paris-Panthéon-Assas University from where she also graduated and later earned her PhD. She taught at the Faculty of Law and Political Sciences of the Saint Joseph University in Beirut and also in France, where she was a visiting professor at the University Panthéon-Assas (Paris II) and the University Panthéon-Sorbonne (Paris I). She is closely related to the Saint Joseph University, where she was the director of the Center for Legal Studies in the Arab World ("CEDROMA") and is currently the Dean of the Faculty of Law as of 2022. Her publications focus on conflicts of laws and jurisdictions. In 2007 she was a founding member of the “Khalass!", which aimed at finding a peaceful solution to the political deadlock at the time. She was a su ...
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Marie Claude Naddaf
Marie Claude Naddaf () is an activist and a nun. In 1994, she became Mother Superior at the Good Shepherd Convent in Damascus, and in 1996, she and her convent opened the "Oasis Shelter", Syria's first facility for victims of human trafficking and domestic violence. She also began Syria's first telephone hotline, which was attached to an emergency shelter for women. She won for women in police custody in Syria the right to be released to a shelter, if they were determined to be victims of trafficking. She also created a nursery school and a vocational education program at the women's prison in Damascus. She received a 2010 International Women of Courage The International Women of Courage Award, also referred to as the U.S. Secretary of State's International Women of Courage Award, is an American award presented annually by the United States Department of State to women around the world who have ... award. References {{DEFAULTSORT:Naddaf, Marie Claude Living people S ...
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