Jacques Delors Institute

Jacques Delors Institute
FounderJacques Delors
TypeThink Tank
Location
  • Paris, 18 rue de Londres, France
President
Enrico Letta (since 2016)
Director
Sylvie Matelly
Websiteinstitutdelors.eu/en

The Jacques Delors Institute (French: Institut Jacques Delors), which also uses the name Notre Europe (French for "Our Europe"), is an independent think tank based in Paris.[1][2] Founded in 1996 by Jacques Delors, it aims to "think a united Europe." Enrico Letta currently serves as president of the Jacques Delors Institute, while Sylvie Matelly is its director.

The Institute was ranked 22nd among the 'Top Think Tanks in Western Europe' in the 2019 Global Go To Think Tank Report of the University of Pennsylvania, making it in third place among think tanks based in France.[3]

In co-operation with the Hertie School of Governance it has operated a branch in Berlin since 2014,[4] the Jacques Delors Institut Berlin. In 2019, The Jacques Delors Institute Berlin merged with the Hertie School, forming the new Jacques Delors Centre.[5] Henrik Enderlein, the former president of the Hertie School, also served as the director of the Jacques Delors Centre. [6] The current director of the Berlin branch is Johannes Lindner.

Since 2017, the Jacques Delors Institute also has an Office in Brussels, which became autonomous in January 2020 under the name Europe Jacques Delors, led by Geneviève Pons.

  1. ^ Campbell & Pedersen, John L. & Ove K. (2014). The National Origins of Policy Ideas: Knowledge Regimes in the United States, France, Germany, and Denmark. Princeton, NY: Princeton University Press. p. 339. ISBN 978-0691161167.
  2. ^ Stone & Ullrich, Diane & Heidi (2013). "Policy research institutes and think tanks in Western Europe: Development trends and perspectives" (PDF). Retrieved 26 January 2020.
  3. ^ https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=think_tanks [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ https://institutdelors.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/1910-EN-Offre-de-stage-bureau-de-Bruxelles-1.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ "All about our new Jacques Delors Centre".
  6. ^ "Prof. Dr. Henrik Enderlein (1974-2021)".

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