Sandrine Salerno

Sandrine Salerno
Mayor of Geneva
In office
1 June 2010  31 May 2011
Preceded by Rémy Pagani
Succeeded by Pierre Maudet
In office
1 June 2013  31 May 2014
Preceded by Rémy Pagani
Succeeded by
Personal details
Born 1971 (age 4344)
Geneva, Switzerland
Nationality Swiss, Italian, French
Political party Socialist Party
Alma mater University of Geneva

Sandrine Salerno (born in 1971 in Geneva) is a Swiss politician and a member of the Socialist Party. She is the Mayor of the city of Geneva, a position she will occupy for a one-year term from 2013-14. She was also Mayor of Geneva between 2010 and 2011.[1]

Background

Ms Salerno's mother was French and her father was Italian. She holds more than one passport.[2] She has two children. She holds a master's degree in Public Administration and a bachelor's degree in Political Science, both from the University of Geneva. She was elected to Geneva's town council in 1999 and became a member of the executive in 2007. Between 1995 and 1997, she was Deputy Chief of the European Third World Centre (CETIM) in the human rights programme. She was Co-ordinator in the Swiss Immigrants' Contact Centre from 1997 to 2001, a researcher at Geneva University from 2001 to 2006, and Deputy Head of the University Affairs unit in the Canton of Geneva's Department of Education.[3]

Office

Ms Salerno is the fourth woman to hold office as Mayor of Geneva.[4] Her appointment as mayor is for a fixed term.[2] She has revamped the regulations concerning rents and property management in the city[5] and introduced new working conditions for city staff.[6]

Salerno has been a longtime campaigner for maternity rights. In accordance with a legal decision on gender equality in June 2007 which resulted in an award of 120,000 Swiss francs to the City Council "for the promotion of equality", Salerno announced in February 2008 that she would be taking maternity leave from her then post in the Geneva Department of Finance and Housing in order to bear her second child. Pierre Maudet covered for her during her confinement.[7]

External links

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sandrine Salerno.
  1. (French) Official site of the Mayor of Geneva, retrieved 28 October 2010
  2. 2.0 2.1 Welcome speech to new residents, Canton of Geneva, retrieved 28 October 2010
  3. OECD Urban Round Table of Ministers and Mayors of 25 May 2010, Cities and Green Growth, retrieved 28 October 2010
  4. (French) Mayors of the City of Geneva since 1842, Archives of the City of Geneva, retrieved 28 October 2010
  5. (French) Tribune de Genève, 19 February 2009, retrieved 28 October 2010
  6. (French) Tribune de Genève, 30 June 2010, retrieved 28 October 2010
  7. (French) Les Quotidiennes, 25 February 2008, retrieved 28 October 2010