Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Annie Laurent

French political scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Annie Laurent
Remove ads

Annie Laurent (born June 3, 1949[1]) is a French journalist and political scientist.

Quick facts Born, Nationality ...

Career

In 1983 Laurent obtained a master's degree in international law, and 1986 she graduated with a doctorate in political science from the University of Paris II Panthéon-Assas under the supervision of Pierre-Marie Dupuy.[2]

In 1980, Laurent and Renée Conan (fr) interviewed women who were anti-nuclear activists in Plogoff, and published the book Femmes de Plogoff in 1981.[3]

Between 1988 and 1992, Laurent edited the periodical Libanoscopie in Lebanon.[4]

Pope Benedict XVI appointed her an expert to the Synode spécial des évêques pour le Moyen-Orient, which was held in Rome in October 2010.[5] In 2009 she founded the association Clarifier,[6] a Catholic proselytism organisation.[7]

Laurent's book L'Europe malade de la Turquie was the 2006 winner of the Prix Henry Malherbe.[8]

Remove ads

Selected works

  • Femmes de Plogoff (1981)[3]
  • Vivre avec l'islam ? : Réflexions chrétiennes sur la religion de Mahomet (1996)
  • L'Europe malade de la Turquie (2005)

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads