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Michaëlle Jean to lead La Francophonie

Former governor general will be the first female, Canadian secretary general
December 3, 2014
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By Tom Peacock


In January, Michaëlle Jean presented the live case at the 33rd annual John Molson School of Business MBA International Case Competition. In January, Michaëlle Jean presented the live case at the 33rd annual John Molson School of Business MBA International Case Competition. | Photo courtesy of Concordia University

 

Canada’s former governor general Michaëlle Jean is the new head of the International Organization of la Francophonie (IOF).

Jean, who visited Concordia last year to assist with the annual John Molson School of Business MBA International Case Competition, was chosen from a shortlist of five candidates to replace the IOF’s outgoing secretary general Abdou Diouf.

La Francophonie, created in 1970 to promote solidarity between 57 member states, announced the new leader on November 30 at a summit in Dakar, Senegal.

In an official statement, Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s expressed his pleasure that the IOF selected a woman and a Canadian; it will be a first for both. “Ms. Jean is the ideal person to promote French and the values of the Organization,” Harper said.

Jean was born in Haiti and moved to Canada with her family in the 1960s to escape the Duvalier regime. She served as governor general from September 2005 to September 2010, and is currently the chancellor of the University of Ottawa.

In January, as the UNESCO special envoy for Haiti, Jean presented the “live case” at Concordia’s John Molson School of Business MBA International Case Competition.

The case, which addressed the modernization and privatization of Haiti’s electrical power system, gave teams from 36 universities a unique opportunity to provide input on the struggling Caribbean nation’s economic future.

Read more about Michaëlle Jean’s 2014 visit to the John Molson School of Business MBA International Case Competition.

 

 



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