The French embassy and the French Business Council, in co-operation with HEC Paris in Qatar, hosted ‘Break the Bias’ themed panel discussions with prominent women from Qatar and France.
Sponsored by HEC Paris in Qatar, L'Occitane, Paris Saint-Germain, and TotalEnergies, the women’s event featured eight key contributors from Qatar’s business, education, culture and art sectors addressing two panel discussions moderated by Prof Shaheena Janjuha-Jivraj, associate professor at HEC Paris in Qatar and an expert in innovation, leadership, and diversity.
“The event was the launchpad for a reimaging of a gender equal world,” said French ambassador Jean-Baptiste Faivre. “The discussions were very deep and fruitful and the interaction with the audience gave an added value to the event, especially after the pandemic restrictions that prevented all sorts of gatherings. I had the occasion to meet amazing women from Qatar today from various domains, ranging formats, to science and innovation, business and engineering.”
The French ambassador for sport, Laurence Fischer, highlighted on the occasion the power of sports in gaining self-confidence and self-esteem. She also emphasised that the development of women's sports is essential to achieve gender equality.
Prof Janjuha-Jivraj said the 2022 International Women’s Day celebration drew a highly enthusiastic response and lively discussion. “The theme for IWD2022 is ‘Break the Bias’ and the achievements of panel members demonstrate the power and impact when women take on leadership roles.
"The range of panelists during the event demonstrates the diversity of female leadership and present a wider profile of role models to strengthen the pipeline of female leaders within Qatar. As we have witnessed during the pandemic the involvement of women across all aspect of decisions generates innovative solutions serving all sectors of society,” she said.
In the first panel discussion, women business leaders explored the biases still holding women back in their career progression, how individuals can proactively challenge workplace bias and the impact of the pandemic in reinforcing greater inequalities for women.
Panelists included HEC Pairs alumna Abeer al-Hammadi, director of Innovation and Economic Development at Qatar Foundation; Maryam al-Bishri, head of Subsurface Asset Planning; Q-SPE board member chairing the Women in Energy chapter; Marie Planckaert, vice-president, Geoscience and Reservoir at TotalEnergies; and Abeer Hassan M E Abuhelaiqa, reservoir engineer, founder & vice chairperson of Qatar Women Engineers Association.
The second panel, which focused on education, culture and art, examined the biases holding back women in the art world. Audience involvement produced examples of workplace bias and how to navigate them and the impact of the pandemic across cinema and arts arenas.
Panel participants were Fatma Hassan Alremaihi, CEO of Doha Film Institute; Dana Alfardan, contemporary composer, songwriter and symphonic artist; Dr Buthaina al-Ansari, entrepreneur, founder and chairperson of Tamkeen Training and Consulting Solutions; and the French-Guinean journalist Folly Bah-Thibault, founder of ‘Elle ira à l'école’ which promotes the education of young girls from disadvantaged families in Guinea.
Concluding the event, Efi Frager, head of the Economic Department of the French embassy, highlighted that “these fruitful discussions paved the way for deeper exchanges on gender equality and women empowerment through further events in the coming months”.
“The event was the launchpad for a reimaging of a gender equal world,” said French ambassador Jean-Baptiste Faivre. “The discussions were very deep and fruitful and the interaction with the audience gave an added value to the event, especially after the pandemic restrictions that prevented all sorts of gatherings. I had the occasion to meet amazing women from Qatar today from various domains, ranging formats, to science and innovation, business and engineering.”
The French ambassador for sport, Laurence Fischer, highlighted on the occasion the power of sports in gaining self-confidence and self-esteem. She also emphasised that the development of women's sports is essential to achieve gender equality.
Prof Janjuha-Jivraj said the 2022 International Women’s Day celebration drew a highly enthusiastic response and lively discussion. “The theme for IWD2022 is ‘Break the Bias’ and the achievements of panel members demonstrate the power and impact when women take on leadership roles.
"The range of panelists during the event demonstrates the diversity of female leadership and present a wider profile of role models to strengthen the pipeline of female leaders within Qatar. As we have witnessed during the pandemic the involvement of women across all aspect of decisions generates innovative solutions serving all sectors of society,” she said.
In the first panel discussion, women business leaders explored the biases still holding women back in their career progression, how individuals can proactively challenge workplace bias and the impact of the pandemic in reinforcing greater inequalities for women.
Panelists included HEC Pairs alumna Abeer al-Hammadi, director of Innovation and Economic Development at Qatar Foundation; Maryam al-Bishri, head of Subsurface Asset Planning; Q-SPE board member chairing the Women in Energy chapter; Marie Planckaert, vice-president, Geoscience and Reservoir at TotalEnergies; and Abeer Hassan M E Abuhelaiqa, reservoir engineer, founder & vice chairperson of Qatar Women Engineers Association.
The second panel, which focused on education, culture and art, examined the biases holding back women in the art world. Audience involvement produced examples of workplace bias and how to navigate them and the impact of the pandemic across cinema and arts arenas.
Panel participants were Fatma Hassan Alremaihi, CEO of Doha Film Institute; Dana Alfardan, contemporary composer, songwriter and symphonic artist; Dr Buthaina al-Ansari, entrepreneur, founder and chairperson of Tamkeen Training and Consulting Solutions; and the French-Guinean journalist Folly Bah-Thibault, founder of ‘Elle ira à l'école’ which promotes the education of young girls from disadvantaged families in Guinea.
Concluding the event, Efi Frager, head of the Economic Department of the French embassy, highlighted that “these fruitful discussions paved the way for deeper exchanges on gender equality and women empowerment through further events in the coming months”.