Sibylle Hamann (born August 14, 1966, in Vienna) is an Austrian politician (Die Grünen) and former journalist. She has been a member of the Austrian National Council since October 23, 2019.
Life
editShe grew up in Vienna, where she also completed her school education. Her parents are the historian Günther Hamann (1924–1994) and his wife Brigitte Hamann (1940–2016), a well-known author and historian. In 1984, she began studying political science in combination with history, ethnology, Russian at the University of Vienna and the Free University of Berlin, which she completed in 1989 with a research stay at the Beida University in Beijing, with a diploma thesis on Women's work and economic reforms in the People's Republic of China.
She then began working as a journalist for the daily newspaper Kurier, where she reported on the upheavals in the Soviet Union, the Caucasus and the Middle East, the end of apartheid in South Africa and the civil war in Rwanda in the "Foreign Policy" section from 1990 to 1994. In 1995, she moved to the news magazine Profil as an editor, where she wrote background reports on Africa, in particular the civil wars in Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (then Zaire). From 1999 to 2001, she was a freelance correspondent in New York City, from where she traveled extensively throughout the US and the Caribbean countries and reported on them. In 2001, she returned to Vienna for Profil and reported for the magazine on the Afghanistan war of the USA against the Taliban, which had broken out at the time. In 2004, she went back to New York for a year as a correspondent. She has lived in Vienna again since 2006 and writes a regular column as a freelance journalist in the bourgeois-liberal daily newspaper Die Presse, for the Viennese weekly newspaper Falter, as well as guest articles for the German feminist magazine Emma and for the weekly newspaper Die Zeit. In 2006/07 she worked as a lecturer at the Institute for Journalism Studies at the University of Vienna, as holder of the Theodor Herzl lectureship,[1] then as a lecturer on the journalism course at the FHWien. She is best known to television audiences as a studio guest on ORF discussion programs. At the Burgtheater she participated as a moderator in the project Die letzten Zeugen (engl. The Last Witnesses) by Doron Rabinovici and Matthias Hartmann, which was shown from 2013 to 2015.
Hamann lives in Vienna and is the mother of two children.
At the federal congress of the Greens on July 6, 2019, she was elected to third place on the federal list (behind Werner Kogler and Leonore Gewessler). In the National Council election on September 29, 2019, she received 2098 preferential votes.[2]
Today, Sibylle Hamann is a member of the National Council Club of the Greens and is her party's spokesperson for education. She is secretary of the parliamentary education committee[3] and a member of the culture committee, the science committee and the social affairs committee.[4]
The nationwide "100 Schools – 1000 Opportunities" program can be traced back to her initiative as an education politician. This enables 100 primary and secondary schools with particularly difficult conditions to break new ground in school development. The locations can try out new educational concepts and receive additional resources to do so. The project is being scientifically supported by a research group from the University of Vienna.[5]
References
edit- ^ Theodor Herzl-Dozentur für Poetik des Journalismus. Institut für Publizistik der Universität Wien,
- ^ Bundesministerium für Inneres. "Nationalratswahl 2019 – Vorzugsstimmen bundesweit" (PDF). Retrieved 2023-08-07.
- ^ "Unterrichtsausschuss | Parlament Österreich" (in German). Retrieved 2023-08-07.
- ^ "Hamann Sibylle, Mag. | Parlament Österreich" (in German). Retrieved 2023-08-07.
- ^ "100 Schulen – 1000 Chancen" (in German). Retrieved 2023-08-07.
External links
editMedia related to Sibylle Hamann at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (in German)