Véronique De Keyser
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Véronique De Keyser (born on 23 March 1945 in Brussels) is a Belgian politician and Member of the European Parliament with the Parti Socialiste, part of the Socialist Group and sits on the European Parliament's Committee on Foreign Affairs.
She is a substitute for the Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality and the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection.
In April 2007 she made headline news when she reportedly said that she wanted to strangle the local Israeli ambassador. [1]
[edit] Education
- 1968: Degree in psychology, Free University of Brussels (ULB)
- 1974: Doctorate in work psychology with Approche psychologique de l'expérience ouvrière à travers les systèmes
[edit] Career
- 1968-1984: Researcher in psychology at the ULB and the Brussels Industrial Study and Research Centre
- 1984: Junior lecturer at the University of Liège
- 1988: Lecturer at the University of Liège
- 1990-1998: Dean of the Psychology and Education Science Faculty at the University of Liège
- Visiting lecturer at the Universities of Oporto, Moscow and Toulouse-Le Mirail
- 1990-1994: President of the Belgian Psychology Society
- since 1995: Administrator at the King Baudouin Foundation
- since 1997: Member of the Employment Board
- since 2001: Member of the European Parliament
- since 1997: President of the European Work and Organisational Psychology Association
- 2001: Human error prevention and well-being at work in West Europe and Russia (co-author), Kluwer
- L'erreur humaine, Labor, forthcoming
See also: European Parliament election, 2004 (Belgium)
[edit] External links
- Personal Website
- European Parliament biography of Véronique De Keyser (incl. Speeches, Questions and Motions)
- DeclarationPDF of financial interests (French)

