Patrick Weil
Patrick Weil (born 14 October 1956) is a French historian and political scientist. He is a research fellow at CNRS, at the Centre for the social history of the 20th century at the University of Paris 1. He studies the history of immigration in France.
He worked as cabinet logistical head of the Secretariat of State for immigrants in 1981 and 1982, and was a member of the Stasi Commission and of of the board of the Cité Nationale de l’Histoire de l’Immigration (Museum of the History of Immigration) - a position which, with seven others, he resigned on 18 May 2007, in protest against the creation of a ministry of immigration and national identity by Nicolas Sarkozy.
He is President of the NGO Libraries Without Borders
He is currently a Visiting Professor of Law at Yale Law School.
In Le Monde Patrick Weil says "Edward Snowden can ask the competent authorities for France’s protection" to obtain constitutional asylum, a specific french protection for "freedom fighters". "Firstly, the French office of refugees and stateless (OFPRA) who is in charge of all the demands for asylum, will have to study his application and make a decision. If this office reject Snowden’s application, the national court of asylum right and the French council of State would decide on its case in first and then last appeal" (Le Monde, June 5, 2014).[1]
Other
In 1992 he received the PhD prize of the National Assembly of France for his PhD work La France et ses étrangers.
References
- ↑ Edward Snowden has a right to asylum in France, Translation of an article published in Le Monde of June 5, 2014
External links
- Patrick Weil's profile at the website of Yale Law School
- Patrick Weil's website