Biancheri had previously founded the largest student association in Europe, European Students' Forum (AEGEE) in 1985 and the think tank LEAP/Europe2020 in 1998.
Biography
Biancheri was born in Nice, France.[2] He lived in Cannes, and had one daughter.
From 1991, through several networks including the Promotheus-Europe group, he contributed to enhance relationship between the European Union and several parts of the world (Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, the Arabic world, South America, Asia, and North America)[3][4][5]
In 1997, at Blair House, during an EU-US summit in Washington, he launches TIESWeb,[6] the first transatlantic web portal dedicated to dialog between European and American civil societies.[7][8]
In 2003 he was among the top twenty "heroes" for being a "French champion of European unity"[9] in a poll by Time Europe.
From 2006, he was the scientific coordinator of the Leap2020 think tank.
Biancheri died on 30 October 2012.[10] He had been seriously ill from cancer for four years.
References
^"Biography". Franck-biancheri.info. 21 March 1987. Archived from the original on 23 August 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2012.