Nicole Bacharan


Nicole Bacharan is a historian and political scientist specializing in American society and French-American relations. She is a researcher with the National Foundation for Political Science and a National Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in California.
Famous for her books and her TV appearances and radio broadcasts in France and the United States, she is the author of numerous essays including several bestsellers, "Faut-il avoir peur de l’Amérique ?" and "Américains-Arabes, l’affrontement". In collaboration with Dominique Simonnet, she also writes novels in the Némo series.
On September 11, 2001, live from the France 2 evening news show hosted by David Pujadas, she left a mark on French television-watchers when she said "Tonight, we are all Americans," a phrase repeated the following day in the newspaper Le Monde.

TV appearances and radio broadcasts

In France, Nicole Bacharan, nicknamed by The New Economist "Miss America", is a radio contributor for Europe 1 on international politics, questions concerning the United States, and transatlantic relations. She is also a contributor to numerous television programs in France and Europe.
In the United States, she has given many interviews on these same topics to The New York Times, The Washington Post or NPR, and appears on CNN, ABC and other networks.

Speaker

Nicole Bacharan gives frequent conferences for numerous organizations, including "L'Alliance française", the French American Foundation, "l'Association France-Amérique", "l'Association France-Etats Unis".
From 1997 to 2002, she taught a seminar in English at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris on contemporary America. She is also a member of the scientific committee of the Blois Historical Association and the History-Science Commission on Man and Society at the National Book Center.

Books

Novels, with Dominique Simonnet :
The President of French Republic awarded her with the Legion of Honor in 2007.