Tristan Mendès France

Tristan Mendès France (born March 7, 1970, in Bordeaux) is a French teacher, columnist, essayist, and film director who works in the digital field.

Early life and education
Son of Joan and Michel Mendès France, and grandson of Pierre Mendès France, Tristan Mendès France was born in 1970 in Bordeaux, Gironde.

In 1995, he obtained a master's degree in public law at the University of Paris 1, then went on to study political science at the Sorbonne, where he specialized in new communication technologies. He obtained a postgraduate degree in political science in 1996 and began a thesis (which he did not finish) under the supervision of Lucien Sfez, at Credap (Centre for Research and Studies on Administrative and Political Decision; formerly hosted by the University of Paris I until its closure).

Activism
In his youth, he was an activist in Ras l'Front, a far-left association created in the 1990s. While working as a parliamentary assistant for socialist senator Michel Dreyfus-Schmidt, Mendès France pushed him to call on the Minister of the Interior, Jean-Pierre Chevènement, to expel the traditionalist Catholic movement of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X from the church of Saint-Nicolas-du-Chardonnet in Paris, without success.

He was a director of the association Together Against the Death Penalty until 2007, sponsors the Anticor association (founded by magistrate Éric Halphen, whose aim is to "fight corruption and restore ethics in politics").

A member of the scientific committee of the journal ProChoix, he has been an abortion rights activist since 1998. He is a director of the Institut Pierre-Mendès-France, of which he was also secretary general until March 2017.

Professional career
He was the parliamentary assistant to the Socialist senator Michel Dreyfus-Schmidt from 1998 to 2008.

Since the end of 2008, he has been a lecturer at the École des hautes études en sciences de l'information et de la communication - Celsa, where he teaches courses in Master 1 and 2 on new digital cultures. He has been an associate lecturer at the University of Paris-Cité in Master 1 since September 2018 and has been teaching at the Sorbonne-Nouvelle since 2015 on the same theme and delivers "web2" training courses at the École des métiers de l'information in Paris since 2009.

Radio
From 1996 to 2001, he participated in a series of radio programs on politics and history on RCJ and was a columnist for TOC magazine. He is also an occasional columnist on France Culture in the show Place de la toile from 2008 to 2009 and on France Inter in the show Instant M since 2016. On December 4, 2020, he became a columnist for the 7/9 of France Inter on Fridays ("Antidote" section).

Web
Since 2006, he has been developing, with Alban Fischer, a participatory video-blog-report on subjects such as the genocide by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, the Armenian genocide in Turkey and, in May 2007, on the question of refugees from Darfur, in partnership with the National Audiovisual Institute (INA). This led them to make A Day in Gaga: Darfur Refugee Camp, a documentary produced by Ina. In 2007, for this initiative of blogtrotters, they were awarded the Michel Colonna d'Istria prize by the Groupement des éditeurs de services en ligne (Geste) and were finalists in the Online Journalism Awards 2008.

In 2011, he launched a satirical web-documentary about the Burmese dictatorship, Happy World, with Cinquième étage production. f

In 2019, he launched the "Stop Hate Money" project, the objective of which is to "hold accountable financial actors and intermediaries who facilitate (sometimes unknowingly) the spread of hate speech online".

Documentaries

 * Happy World: Burma, the Dictatorship of the Absurd, Planète, 2011 Orson-Welles Award at the California Film Awards
 * A Day in Gaga, Darfur Refugee Camp, INA, 2007
 * Docteur la mort, (film directed by Jean-Pierre Prévost on an investigation by Tristan Mendès France, a documentary about the South African doctor Wouter Basson) broadcast on France 3 on Thursday, May 31, 2001.
 * Disease Number 9, The Fifth, 2000