FACTOID # 122: If you're Dutch or Swedish, you're among the world's most likely to end up living in a retirement home. If you're Japanese, you'll probably end up living with your children.
 
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Encyclopedia > Minister of Overseas France
President of France
Prime Minister of France

Minister of Foreign Affairs
Minister of the Interior
Minister of the Economy, Finance and Industry
Minister of Defence
Minister of Justice ("Keeper of the Seals")
Minister of National Education, Advanced Instruction and Research
Minister of Culture and Communications
Minister of Agriculture, Food, Fishing and Rural Affairs
Minister of Health and Solidarity
Minister of Transportation, Public Works, Tourism and the Sea
Minister of the Environment and Sustainable Development
Minister of Employment, Social Cohesion and Housing
Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports
Minister of Overseas France // French politics under the Fifth Republic After Charles de Gaulle had the constitution of the French Fifth Republic adopted in 1958, France was ruled by successive right-wing administrations until 1981. ... Symbol of the French government The government of France is a semi-presidential system based on the French Constitution of the fifth Republic, in which the nation declares itself to be an indivisible, secular, democratic, and social Republic. The constitution provides for a separation of powers and proclaims Frances... The President of France, known officially as the President of the Republic (Président de la République in French), is Frances elected Head of State. ... The Prime Minister of France (Premier ministre de la France) is the functional head of the Cabinet of France. ... In 1589, the four French Secretaries of State became specialized, with one of the secretaries responsible for foreign affairs. ... The entrance to the Ministry in Place Beauvau is guarded by one gendarme (to the left) and one policewoman (to the right). ... The new ministry building in Bercy, Paris The Minister of the Economy, Finance and Industry (Ministre de lEconomie, des Finances et de lIndustrie), or Minister of Finances for short, is one of the most prominent positions in the cabinet of France after the Prime Minister. ... Categories: French government | Stub ... The French Minister of Justice (Ministre de la Justice) is an important cabinet official in the Government of France. ... Categories: French government | France-related stubs | Education in France ... The Minister of Culture and Communications is, in the Government of France, the cabinet member in charge of national museums and monuments; promoting and protecting the arts (visual, plastic, theatrical, musical, dance, architectural, literary, televisual and cinematographic) in France and abroad; and managing the national archives and regional maisons de... The Minister of Agriculture, Food, Fishing and Rural Affairs is a cabinet member in the Government of France. ... The Minister of Health and Solidarity is a cabinet member in in the Government of France responsible for overseeing Frances massive healthcare system (including universal healthcare), family services and services to the handicapped/differently-abled. ... The Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports (Ministre de la Jeunesse et des Sports, alternatively translated Minister of Youth and Sports) is, in the Government of France, the cabinet member in charge of national and public sport associations, youth affairs, public sports centers and national stadia (like the Stade de...

Presidents of the Senate (List)

Presidents of the National Assembly (List) The French Senate is the Upper House of the French Parliament. ... This page lists Presidents of the Lower Chamber (or only chamber, as the case may be) of the French parliament. ...

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The Minister of Overseas France ("Ministre de l'Outremer", formerly "Minister of Overseas France and her Colonies") is a cabinet member in the Government of France responsible for overseeing French overseas departments and territories (such as the département d'outre-mer). French government ministers are members of the Prime Ministers cabinet, although in French the term cabinet is rarely used to describe the gouvernement, even in translation (as it is used in French to mean a ministers private office, composed of politically-appointed aides). ... Symbol of the French government The government of France is a semi-presidential system based on the French Constitution of the fifth Republic, in which the nation declares itself to be an indivisible, secular, democratic, and social Republic. The constitution provides for a separation of powers and proclaims Frances... The French Overseas Departments and Territories (often abbreviated DOM-TOM for départements doutre-mer, territoires doutre-mer) consist broadly of French-administered or -claimed territories outside of Europe. ... Under the 1946 Constitution of the Fourth Republic, the French colonies of Guadeloupe, Martinique and French Guiana in the Caribbean and Réunion in the Indian Ocean became départements doutre-mer (Overseas departments) or DOMs. ...


Ministers of Overseas France

  • Ernest Boulanger 20 March 1894 - 30 May 1894
  • Théophile Delcassé 30 May 1894 - 26 January 1895
  • Émile Chautemps 26 January 1895 - 1 November 1895
  • Pierre Guieysse 4 November 1895 - 29 April 1896
  • André Lebon 29 April 1896 - 31 May 1898
  • Gabriel Hanotaux 31 May 1898 - 28 June 1898
  • Georges Trouillot 28 June 1898 - 1 November 1898
  • Antoine Guillain 1 November 1898 - 22 June 1899
  • Albert Decrais 22 June 1899 - 7 June 1902
  • Gaston Doumergue 7 June 1902 - 24 January 1905
  • Étienne Clémentel 24 January 1905 - 14 March 1906
  • Georges Leygues 14 March 1906 - 25 October 1906
  • Raphaël Milliès-Lacroix 25 October 1906 - 24 July 1909
  • Georges Trouillot 24 July 1909 - 3 November 1910
  • Jean Morel 3 November 1910 - 2 March 1911
  • Adolphe Messimy 2 March 1911 - 27 June 1911
  • Albert Lebrun 27 June 1911 - 12 January 1913
  • René Besnard 12 January 1913 - 21 January 1913
  • Jean Morel 21 January 1913 - 9 December 1913
  • Albert Lebrun 9 December 1913 - 9 June 1914
  • Maurice Maunoury 9 June 1914 - 13 June 1914
  • Maurice Raynaud 13 June 1914 - 26 août 1914
  • Gaston Doumergue 26 August 1914 - 20 March 1917
  • André Maginot 20 March 1917 - 12 September 1917
  • René Besnard 12 September 1917 - 16 November 1917
  • Henry Simon 16 Novembrer 1917 - 20 January 1920
  • Albert Sarraut 20 January 1920 - 29 March 1924
  • Jean Fabry 29 March 1924 - 14 June 1924
  • Édouard Daladier 14 June 1924 - 17 April 1925
  • Orly André-Hesse 17 April 1925 - 29 October 1925
  • Léon Perrier 29 October 1925 - 19 July 1926
  • Adrien Dariac 19 July 1926 - 23 July 1926
  • Léon Perrier 23 July 1926 - 6 November 1928
  • André Maginot 11 November 1928 - 3 November 1929
  • François Piétri 3 November 1929 - 21 February 1930
  • Lucien Lamoureux 21 February 1930 - 2 March 1930
  • François Piétri 2 March 1930 - 13 December 1930
  • Théodore Steeg 13 December 1930 - 27 January 1931
  • Paul Reynaud 27 January 1931 - 20 February 1932
  • Louis de Chappedelaine 20 February 1932 - 3 June 1932
  • Albert Sarraut 3 June 1932 - 6 September 1933
  • Albert Dalimier 6 September 1933 - 26 October 1933
  • François Piétri 26 October 1933 - 26 November 1933
  • Albert Dalimier 26 November 1933 - 9 January 1934
  • Lucien Lamoureux 9 January 1934 - 30 January 1934
  • Henry de Jouvenel 30 January 1934 - 9 February 1934
  • Pierre Laval 9 February 1934 - 13 October 1934
  • Louis Rollin 13 October 1934 - 24 January 1936
  • Jacques Stern 24 January 1936 - 4 June 1936
  • Marius Moutet 4 June 1936 - 18 January 1938
  • Théodore Steeg 18 January 1938 - 13 March 1938
  • Marius Moutet 13 March 1938 - 10 April 1938
  • Georges Mandel 10 April 1938 - 18 May 1940
  • Louis Rollin 18 May 1940 - 16 June 1940
  • Albert Rivière 16 June 1940 - 12 July 1940
  • Henry Lémery 12 July 1940 - 6 September 1940
  • Charles Platon 6 September 1940 - 18 April 1942
  • Jules Brévié 18 April 1942 - 26 March 1943
  • Henri Bléhaut 26 March 1943 - 20 August 1944
  • René Pleven (commissaire) 24 September 1941 - 28 July 194
  • Hervé Alphand(commissaire) 28 July 1942 - 17 October 1942
  • René Pleven (commissaire) 17 October 1942 - 10 September 1944
  • René Pleven 10 September 1944 - 16 November 1944
  • Paul Giacobbi16 November 1944 - 21 November 1945
  • Jacques Soustelle 21 November 1945 - 26 January 1946
  • Marius Moutet 26 January 1946 - 23 December 1946
  • Auguste Laurent 23 December 1946 - 22 January 1947
  • Marius Moutet 22 January 1947 - 22 October 1947
  • Paul Coste-Floret 22 October 1947 - 29 October 1949
  • Jean Letourneau 29 October 1949 - 3 July 1950
  • Paul Coste-Floret 3 July 1950 - 12 July 1950
  • François Mitterrand12 July 1950 - 11 August 1951
  • Louis Jacquinot 11 August 1951 - 8 March 1952
  • Pierre Pflimlin 8 March 1952 - 8 January 1953
  • Louis Jacquinot 8 January 1953 - 19 June 1954
  • Robert Buron 19 June 1954 - 20 January 1955
  • Jean-Jacques Duglas20 January 1955 - 23 February 1955
  • Pierre-Henri Teitgen23 February 1955 - 1 February 1956
  • Gaston Defferre1 February 1956 - 13 June 1957
  • Gérard Jaquet 13 June 1957 - 14 May 1958
  • André Colin 14 May 1958 - 9 June 1958
  • Bernard Cornut-Gentille 9 June 1958 - 8 janvier 1959
  • Robert Lecourt 5 February 1960 - 24 August 1961
  • Louis Jacquinot 24 August 1961 - 8 January 1966
  • Pierre Billotte 8 January 1966 - 30 May 1968
  • Joël Le Theule 30 May 1968 - 10 July 1968
  • Pierre Messmer 25 February 1971 - 7 July 1972
  • Bernard Stasi 2 April 1973 - 27 February 1974
  • Bernard Pons 20 March 1986 - 10 May 1988
  • Louis Le Pensec 23 June 1988 - 29 March 1993
  • Dominique Perben 29 March 1993 - 18 May 1995
  • Jean-Jacques de Peretti 18 May 1995 - 7 November 1995
  • Brigitte Girardin 7 May 2002 - 2 June 2005
  • François Baroin 2 June 2005 - present

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France deployed additional military forces to Cote d’Ivoire in 2002 and to Central African Republic in 2003 to address crises in both countries and, with EU partners, led an international military operation to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2003.
France participates actively in the Proliferation Security Initiative, and is engaged with the U.S., both bilaterally and at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), to curb nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC) proliferation from the D.P.R.K., Iran, Libya, and elsewhere.
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