Réjane Sénac | |
Nationality: | French |
Workplaces: | French National Centre for Scientific Research |
Doctoral Advisor: | Marc Sadoun |
Réjane Sénac (born 1975) is a French political scientist. She specialises in gender equality in recent French history and politics, as well as the politics of discrimination and diversity. She is the Director of Research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in the Centre de recherches politiques (fr) of Sciences Po. She was president of the parity commission of the French High Council for Equality between Women and Men (fr), which was an independent national advisory body under the Prime Minister of France from January 2013 to January 2019.
Sénac graduated from Sciences Po Paris in 2004 with a doctorate in political science.[1] Her dissertation was entitled Identités sexuées et altérité démocratique: les représentations des différences hommes-femmes dans la société française aujourd'hui.[2] Sénac also holds a post-graduate diploma in law, and a master's degree in philosophy from The University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne.[3]
Sénac is the Director of Research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research within Sciences Po, and she is a member of the steering committee of PRESAGE (which stands for programme de recherche et d'enseignement des savoirs sur le genre, or the Gender Research and Teaching Program).[3] She is also a member of the scientific council of La Cité du Genre, which is a gender studies research network that spans Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, Paris Descartes University, Paris Diderot University, University of Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3, and Sciences Po.[3] [4]
Sénac has written about the problematic implications of the French republican ethos expressed by the motto Liberté, égalité, fraternité.[5] In her 2015 work l'Egalité sous conditions (Conditional equality), Sénac argues that women were included in the republican pact (via parity in particular) by virtue only of their differences from men, and were viewed as complementary but dissimilar entities to the default of men.[6] Sénac's 2017 work Non-Frères au pays de l’égalité (Non-brothers in the country of equality) develops a notion of Republican "non-brothers": those who were excluded from the French Republic's original definition of citizenship, including women, people who are not white, people who are not heterosexual, intersex people, and gender nonbinary people. Arguing that the political citizenship that was defined and enforced by the French Revolution was established by excluding certain categories of people from the social contract, Sénac traces the progressive acceptance of non-brothers through the norm of their complementarity to enfranchised citizens, rather than their similarity to them or in recognition of any inherent rights. Sénac argues that the framing of the famous statement of liberty and equality for all actually constructed Republican France to be a deeply unequal society.
She has analysed the historical justifications for the public promotion of parity and diversity in French society in terms of the original call to extend liberty and equality exactly to those people who were members of the political fraternity, not necessarily to any others.[7]
Sénac's work has been cited in media outlets like 20 minutes,[8] Slate,[9] Forbes,[10] and Le Monde.[11]