Union Nationale des Étudiants de France
| Institution | France's universities |
|---|---|
| Location | 127, rue de l'Ourcq - 75019 Paris, France |
| Established | 4 May 1907 |
| President | Imane Ouelhadj |
| Members | 30,000 |
| Affiliations | European Students' Union |
| Website | www |
The National Union of Students of France (French: Union nationale des étudiants de France, pronounced [ynjɔ̃ nɑsjɔnal dez‿etydjɑ̃ də fʁɑ̃s]; abbr. UNEF) a national students' union in France. It is historically close to the Socialist Party, with many of its member joining the party after leaving student life.[1]
It works to represent the interest of students for national and local governments, political parties, the government bodies concerned with higher education and their administration of the universities. The organisation is also active on the international arena.
History
1907: UNEF foundation by the merging of many AGEs (Associations Générales d'Étudiants, Students' General Associations) from different towns at a meeting held in Lille
1946: Adoption of the Charter of Grenoble which define the student as a "young intellectual worker". Since then, the UNEF has considered itself to be a part of the labour movement. The creation in France of the students' social security and welfare systems are the result of UNEF activism
1950s: The UNEF led the protest for independence of Algeria
1968: May 68 revolt. On 27 May the meeting of the UNEF, most outstanding of the events of May 68, proceeds and gathers 30.000 to 50.000 people in the Stade Sebastien Charlety.
1971 to 2001: The UNEF was split between UNEF-SE (Solidarité Étudiante, Students' solidarity) (linked to the French Communist Party) and UNEF-US (Unité Syndicale, Union Unity), which later evolved into UNEF-ID (Indépendante et Démocratique, Independence and democracy) (linked to the Internationalist Communist Organisation and close to the Socialist Party).
1986: The UNEFs led a victorious strike against student fees and selection at college admission
1995: Major protests against a government project of minimum wage for youth lower than for other salaries
2001: The UNEFs eventually reunified under the name 'UNEF'.
2001: Yassir Fichtali elected new chairman
2005: Bruno Julliard elected new chairman
2006: The UNEF played a major role in students' contestation of the prime minister Dominique de Villepin's Contrat première embauche.
2007: Jean-Baptiste Prévost elected new chairman
2011: Emmanuel Zemmour elected new chairman
2014: William Martinet elected new chairman
2016: Lilâ Le Bas elected new chairman
2019: Mélanie Luce elected new chairman
Democracy
Today, the UNEF is still composed of the different AGEs. There is one AGE in each town where a university is located, except in Paris, where there is an AGE by university. Membership is individual: every student can choose to join the AGE of his/her home town.
The UNEF holds a national conference every two years. National conference is the sovereign body of the UNEF and decide the UNEF policy.
Conferences are contested by factions:
- Majorité Nationale (National Majority): 80% of the votes in 2007
- Tendance pour une UNEF Unitaire et Démocratique (For a unitarian and democratic UNEF): 13%
- Tendance Refondation Syndicale (Union's refoundation): 7%
The conference also elects an administrative commission (Commission Administrative) to be the UNEF 'parliament' between conferences. The commission elects the National Board, the executive body.
Related organisations
The UNEF has created many national federations:
- CECED (Comité Étudiant Contre l'Extrême Droite, Students' Committee against Far Right)
- FERUF (Fédération des Étudiants en Résidences Universitaires de France, Resident Students Federation)
- UCEF (Union des Coopératives Étudiantes de France, Union of Students' Cooperatives)
- FENEC (Fédération Nationale des Étudiants Chercheurs)
The UNEF has also participated in the creation of different bodies related to students:
- MNEF, then replaced by LMDE in 2000 (La Mutuelle Des Etudiants) which operates the students' social security system
- ESIB in 1981, named ESU in 2007 (European Students Union)
Controversies
Gender-based and sexual violence
Amid the international backdrop of allegations against Harvey Weinstein reported by The New York Times and The New Yorker[2][3] the French daily newspaper Le Monde published in November 2017 two detailed investigations into alleged sexual harassment and predation within UNEF, implicating former presidents Jean-Baptiste Prévost and Emmanuel Zemmour.[4][5] In an editorial, over 80 current and former female members and activists of UNEF signed an open letter denouncing “an exacerbated expression of physical and sexual domination” and calling out a “system of sexual predation” that had developed under Prévost and continued under Zemmour.[6] In response, Prévost acknowledged that the organisation was “undoubtedly not free from reproach”.
In spite of multiple pressions, the daily newspaper Libération published in February 2018 a long article with sixteen testimonies of female activists who have suffered from rape, sexual harassment and abuse within the organisation.[7]
In December 2017, the president of the UNEF chapter in Nice, Paul Morançay, resigned after it was revealed that the local branch had attempted to suppress a rape complaint filed by a student against a masseur recommended by the chapter.[8][9] The cover-up reportedly prompted the departure of a large portion of the branch’s members[10] Following these revelations, UNEF established a dedicated email address to collect testimonies from victims[90]. While UNEF president Lilâ Le Bas asserted that “silence and the code of omertà no longer prevail”,[11] the scandal highlighted enduring issues of moral harassment and systemic sexism within the organisation.
Despite multiple pressures[12] the newspaper Libération published in February 2018 an extensive follow-up article containing sixteen testimonies from female activists who reported rape, sexual harassment, and other abuses within UNEF. The revelations prompted ongoing scrutiny of the student union’s internal culture and governance.
Allegations of discrimination and racism
In March 2019, UNEF joined in the protests and criticisms organised by anti-racist activists—including the Ligue de défense noire africaine, the Brigade anti-négrophobie, and the CRAN—against the staging of The Suppliants by Aeschylus at the Sorbonne.[13] The activists objected to the actresses portraying the Danaïdes (Egyptians in the play) who wore darkened makeup and copper-coloured masks, practices they considered to constitute blackface[105]. UNEF characterised this as the “perpetuation of racist patterns”. Cultural figures criticised the protests as a “logic of fundamentalist and identity-based censorship”.[14] Both the Ministers of Higher Education and of Culture “strongly condemned this unprecedented violation of freedom of expression”.[15] Pierre Jourde, a former UNEF official at Paris XII, described the union as having become “stupid, totalitarian, illiterate, and obscurantist,” calling it “a union of Taliban”.[16]
In 2021, UNEF became the focus of controversy when its president stated in a radio interview that the union was convening meetings from which white individuals were excluded.[17][18]
Accusation of Islamophobia
Regarding the wearing of the veil, UNEF took a position in 2013 opposing its display within university premises.
However, in 2018, when a veiled UNEF official at Paris IV University faced criticism—some perceiving a contradiction with the union’s feminist values and the display of a religious symbol—UNEF defended her.[19] Former UNEF president Bruno Julliard stated that “UNEF’s discourse in defending the veil tramples decades of struggle”.[20] Similarly, Jean-Christophe Cambadélis, another former president, remarked: “This veiled woman is a provocation. If UNEF does not return to a more union-focused approach, prioritising the defence of student rights, they will end up as a small sect”.[21]
According to an investigation by Abel Mestre of Le Monde, UNEF established a prayer room in 2015 during a national collective meeting at the request of Muslim activists. The journalist noted that it was “an episode that will not be repeated”.[22] The union later changed its approach, as its membership declined and agreements were made with Étudiants musulmans de France during several student elections.[23]
In January 2018, alongside the union Solidaires étudiant-e-s at Paris VII University, UNEF attempted to prevent a performance of the play Letter to the Scammers of Islamophobia Who Play into the Hands of Racists, adapted from Charb’s book, on the grounds that the event “contributes to the racist construction of an internal enemy within a racialised and dangerous category: the Muslim”.
UNEF’s positions on these issues have been criticised by intellectuals, journalists, and political parties. Jack Dion, deputy editorial director of Marianne, argued that the union was rehabilitating blasphemy.[24]
On 17 September 2020, during a parliamentary hearing on “COVID-19 and Youth,” three deputies from Les Républicains (Marianne Dubois, Pierre-Henri Dumont, Frédéric Reiss) and a representative of the presidential majority (Anne-Christine Lang) walked out in protest against the presence of UNEF vice-president Maryam Pougetoux, who was wearing a hijab. However, the committee chair, Sandrine Mörch, stated that “no rules prohibit the wearing of religious symbols for those being heard”.[25]
On 19 October 2020, following the decapitation of history teacher Samuel Paty, UNEF members participating in demonstrations were booed, with attendees criticising statements made by UNEF officials regarding Islamism.[26]
References
- ^ figaro, le. "De présidents de l'Unef à apparatchiks du Parti socialiste". Le Figaro Etudiant (in French). Retrieved June 11, 2021.
- ^ Kim Willsher, "Allegations of sexual violence soar in France after Weinstein scandal," The Guardian, 14 November 2017.
- ^ Charlotte Cieslinski, "2017, année de révolte des femmes," L'Obs, 30 December 2017.
- ^ "Harcèlement sexuel : la parole se libère à l’UNEF," Le Monde, 17 November 2017.
- ^ "Enquête sur un système de violences sexistes au sein du syndicat étudiant UNEF," Le Monde, 28 November 2017.
- ^ "Militantes, nous dénonçons les violences sexistes et sexuelles à l’UNEF," Le Monde, 28 November 2017.
- ^ Laure Bretton et Ismaël Halissat, « Abus sexuels : les témoignages qui accablent l'Unef », Libération, February 19, 2018.
- ^ "Agression sexuelle d'une étudiante pendant un massage à la fac: les messages accablants qui plongent l'Unef dans la tourmente," Nice Matin, 6 December 2017
- ^ "Plainte pour viol d'une étudiante à Nice: le masseur écroué," France Info, 6 December 2017
- ^ "A Nice, les atermoiements de l’UNEF sur une affaire de viol présumé," Le Monde, 16 December 2017
- ^ "Lilâ Le Bas, présidente de l'UNEF : « Le silence et l'omerta ne sont plus la loi »" (in French). November 29, 2017. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ Laure Bretton et Ismaël Halissat « Unef : trois mois d’enquête et une publication reportée », Libération, February 19, 2018.
- ^ "« Blackface » à la Sorbonne : « Ne pas céder aux intimidations, telle est notre responsabilité »" (in French). April 11, 2019. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "« Blackface » à la Sorbonne : « Ne pas céder aux intimidations, telle est notre responsabilité »" (in French). April 11, 2019. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "Une pièce d'Eschyle accusée d'être "racialiste" empêchée à la Sorbonne". Le Nouvel Obs (in French). March 28, 2019. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "TRIBUNE. Eschyle censuré : « l'UNEF est devenu un syndicat de talibans »". Le Nouvel Obs (in French). April 9, 2019. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "Row over 'non-whites-only' student meetings as campaigning politicians wade in". RFI. March 29, 2021. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
- ^ "French left tears itself apart over 'non-white' meetings". POLITICO. April 1, 2021. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
- ^ Toranian, Valérie (May 21, 2018). "L'Unef, le voile et le bal des hypocrites". Revue Des Deux Mondes (in French). Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ Girard, Étienne (May 23, 2018). "Bruno Julliard, ex-président de l'Unef : "Le discours de l'Unef pour défendre le voile, ce sont des décennies de combat piétinées"". www.marianne.net (in French). Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "L'Unef, histoire d'un naufrage". lejdd.fr (in French). January 19, 2020. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "Maryam Pougetoux, responsable de l'UNEF, répond aux critiques sur son voile" (in French). May 20, 2018. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ Toranian, Valérie (May 21, 2018). "L'Unef, le voile et le bal des hypocrites". Revue Des Deux Mondes (in French). Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ Dion, Jack (February 1, 2018). "Censure à l'université Paris-Diderot : la deuxième mort de Charb". www.marianne.net (in French). Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ "Des députés LR et une élue LREM refusent d'auditionner une étudiante voilée". 20 Minutes (in French). September 17, 2020. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
- ^ Etudiant, Figaro (October 19, 2020). "Assassinat de Samuel Paty: chahutée lors de la manifestation, l'Unef est rattrapée par ses contradictions". Le Figaro Etudiant (in French). Retrieved October 6, 2025.