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Anne Bouillon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anne Bouillon
Born
France
NationalityFrench
OccupationLawyer
Known forJust Charity,Anne Bouillon: Justice for all!

Anne Bouillon is a French lawyer born in 1972 specializing in women's rights.[1][2] She is registered with the bar of Nantes. According to GQ she was the most powerful lawyer in France in 2019.[3]

Career

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Anne Bouillon was sworn in in January 2001 before the Aix-en-Provence Court of Appeal. She began her career in Marseille in immigration and employee law before setting up her own law firm in Nantes in 2003.[4] Her commitment to the defense of women victims of domestic violence, which she made her specialty, and her involvement in feminist associations propelled her to the fore.[5][6]

In 2019 the mayor of Nantes Johanna Rolland included her on her list in an ineligible position.[7] In 2023, she is cited by Matthieu Aron in his book The great pleadings of the tenors of the bar which relates the trial of Edinson Valejo.[8][9]

Family

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Anne Bouillon is the great-niece of Josephine Baker and her fourth husband, Jo Bouillon,[10] she is also the niece of director Gilles Bouillon and the cousin of actor Bastien Bouillon. She is the mother of a child and married to criminal lawyer Franck Boëzec.[11]

Associations

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She participated in the creation of the Citad'elle association in Nantes. She is also a member of the LesFameuses association,[12] an organization bringing together women managers or occupying positions of high responsibility across France. In 2020, she was elected Famer of the Year. In 2023, she will participate in the 250th anniversary of the Grand Orient de France in Nantes as a speaker alongside Georges Sérignac and Pierre Mollier.[13][14]

Documentary

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Notes and references

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  1. ^ Chloé Pilorget-Rezzouk. "Anne Bouillon, femmes, je vous plaide". Liberation.fr.
  2. ^ Florence Pagneux. "Robe noire et verbe haut". La Croix.
  3. ^ Thierry Lévêque. "Les 30 avocats les plus puissants de France (édition 2019)". GQ Magazine.
  4. ^ "Anne Bouillon, la cause des femmes". annebouillon.com. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  5. ^ "Nantes. Une centaine de personnes réunies pour dire "stop" aux féminicides". Ouest France.
  6. ^ [1] Archived 29 September 2022 at the Wayback MachineFrance 3
  7. ^ Municipales 2020. À Nantes, un local et un slogan pour Johanna Rolland on Ouest-France
  8. ^ Face Arrière livre Les grandes plaidoiries des ténors du barreau
  9. ^ Sommaire livre Les grandes plaidoiries des ténors du barreau
  10. ^ Charlotte Barbaza. "Joséphine Baker entre mardi au Panthéon : la fierté de sa petite-nièce Anne Bouillon à Nantes". France TV.
  11. ^ Céline Dupeyrat. "Nantes : pour les avocats de la famille du jeune tué par un policier, "la vérité rien que la vérité"". France 3.
  12. ^ La Fameuse interview : Anne Bouillon on LesFameuses.com
  13. ^ « La franc-maçonnerie participe à l’amélioration de la société », raconte un Grand Maître on Ouest-France
  14. ^ La franc-maçonnerie d’hier à demain, entre tradition et modernité on fm-mag.fr
  15. ^ Marie-Laure Michelon. "« Juste Charity », confessions d'une affranchie". L'Obs.
  16. ^ "Anne Bouillon : Justice pour toutes". film-documentaire.fr.