Gilbert Paquette
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gilbert Paquette (born October 19, 1942, in Montreal, Quebec) is a researcher at the Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur le téléapprentissage (CIRTA-LICEF), which he founded in 1992, and a Quebec politician. He was National Assembly of Quebec member for the riding of Rosemont from 1976 to 1985 under the Parti Québécois banner and in the final months of his second term as an Independant MNA.
Contents |
[edit] Profile
Gilbert Paquette is a professor at UQAM. He holds a master's degree in computer science and mathematics and a doctorate from the Université du Maine in artificial intelligence and education. He holds a Canada Research chair. He is scientific director of the LORNET network, arguably the largest Canadian Semantic Web initiative.
He has been the keynote speaker of several international conferences and he is part in the board of five journals. He also founded two companies, Micro-Intel (1987-1991) and Cogigraph (1999-2004).
Paquette was Minister of Sciences and Technology from 1982 to 1984 in the Parti Québécois government of René Lévesque. He made a comeback on the political scene in 2005 when he joined the Parti Québécois leadership election to succeed Bernard Landry. On November 10, 2005 he withdrew from the race and asked his supporters to vote for Pauline Marois.
[edit] See also
- Parti Québécois Crisis, 1984
- Parti Québécois leadership election, 2005
- Parti Québécois
- Quebec sovereignty movement
- Politics of Quebec
[edit] External links
- Biography (French) on the National Assembly of Quebec website
- Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur le téléapprentissage website (English)
National Assembly of Quebec | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Gilles Bellemare (Liberal) |
MNA for Rosemont 1976–1985 |
Succeeded by Guy Rivard (Liberal) |