List of alumni of Aix-Marseille University
This list of alumni of Aix-Marseille University includes graduates and non-graduate former students of Aix-Marseille University, Aix-en-Provence/Marseille, France.
Nobel laureates

René Cassin, winner of the 1968 Nobel Peace Prize
- René Cassin – winner of the 1968 Nobel Peace Prize
- J. M. G. Le Clézio – winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Literature
- Frédéric Mistral – winner of the 1904 Nobel Prize in Literature
Politics and government
Heads of state and government

Adolphe Thiers, President of France from 1871 to 1873
Foreign politicians

Hermann Höcherl, Minister of the Interior of Germany from 1961 to 1965
- Mohamed Abbou – Minister-Delegate for Industry, Trade, Investment and the Digital Economy of Morocco: 2013–present; Member of the House of Representatives of Morocco: 1997–present[1]
- Nizar Baraka – Minister of Economy and Finance of Morocco: 2012–2013; President of the CESE (Social, Economic & Environmental Council): 2013–present
- Driss Benzekri – Moroccan left-wing political and human rights activist
- Albert Borschette – European Commissioner for Competition: 1970–1976; Luxembourgian European Commissioner: 1970–1976
- Brian Campion – American politician, member of the Vermont House of Representatives
- Pascal Chabi Kao – Beninese politician
- Adolfo Costa du Rels – President of the Council of the League of Nations: 1940–1946; Minister of Foreign Affairs of Bolivia: 1948; Bolivian Ambassador to France: 1948–1952[2]
- Francis Covi – President of the National Assembly of Benin: 1959–1960; Member of the National Assembly of Benin: 1960–1963
- Piotr Czauderna – Member of the National Development Council of Poland
- Nigel Davies – former MP for Epping, UK
- Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde, PC – British politician, the Leader of the House of Lords, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and the Leader of the Conservative Party in the House of Lords[3][4]
- Hermann Höcherl – Minister of the Interior of Germany: 1961-1965; Minister of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection of Germany: 1965-1969[5][6]
- Idriss Azami Al Idrissi – Moroccan politician of the Justice and Development Party, Minister-Delegate for the Budget in the cabinet of Abdelilah Benkirane
- Mamadou Koulibaly – President of the National Assembly of Côte d'Ivoire: 2001–2012[7]
- Luzolo Bambi Lessa – Minister of Justice of the Democratic Republic of the Congo: 2008–present
- Penda Mbow – Minister of Culture of Senegal: 2001[8]
- Kunio Mikuriya – Secretary General of the World Customs Organization (WCO): 2009–present[9]
- Federica Mogherini – Minister of Foreign Affairs of Italy: Feb–Oct 2014; High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice President of the European Commission: 2014–present[10]
- Benoît Pelletier – Minister of Canadian Intergovernmental Affairs: 2003–2008; Leader of the Government in Parliament: 2007–2008[11][12]
- Josué Pierre-Louis – Minister of Justice of Haiti: Oct–Nov 2011
- Daniel Rajakoba – Malagasy politician, founder of the Fihavanantsika party
- Roy Reding – Member of the Parliament of Luxembourg, Vice President of the Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR), and treasurer of the Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists (AECR)
- Johnson Roussety – former Chief Commissioner of Rodrigues, Mauritius
- Nicolas Schmit – Minister of Labour, Employment and Immigration of Luxembourg: 2009–present
- Iain Sproat – Minister for Sport and Tourism (UK): 1993–1997; Member of Parliament for Harwich: 1992–1997; Member of Parliament for Aberdeen South: 1970–1983[13]
- René Steichen – European Commissioner for Agriculture & Rural Development: 1992–1995; Luxembourgian European Commissioner: 1992–1995
- Jorge Telerman – Argentine politician and journalist, the 4th Chief of Government of Buenos Aires City[14]
- Roland Theis – the General Secretary of the Christian Democrat Union in Saarland, Germany[15]
- Erik Ullenhag – Minister of Integration of Sweden: 2010–2014; Leader of the Liberal People's Party in the Swedish Riksdag: 2014–present[16]
French politicians

Élisabeth Guigou, Minister of Justice of France from 1997 to 2000
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- Benjamin Abram – Mayor of Aix-en-Provence: 1888–1896
- Yann Aguila – Councillor of State of France: 1990–2010
- Antoine Aude – Mayor of Aix-en-Provence: 1835–1848
- Félix Baret – Mayor of Marseille: 1887–1892
- Jacques Barrot – Member of the Constitutional Council of France: 2010–2014; Vice-President of the European Commission: 2004–2010; European Commissioner for Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship: 2008–2010; European Commissioner for Transport: 2004–2008; Minister of Social Affairs of France: 1995–1997; Minister of Health of France: 1979–1981; Minister of Commerce and Industry of France: 1978–1979[17]
- Victor Barthélemy – French political activist
- Jassuda Bédarrides – Mayor of Aix-en-Provence: 1848–1849
- Joseph Cabassol – Mayor of Aix-en-Provence: 1902–1908
- Adolphe Crémieux – Minister of Justice of France: Feb–Jun 1848; 1870–1871
- Thomas Degos – Prefect of Mayotte: 2011–2013
- Blaise Diagne – French politician who was the first black African elected to the French Chamber of Deputies, and the first to hold a position in the French government[18]
- Charles Giraud – Minister of National Education of France/Minister of Public Worship of France: Jan–Apr/Oct–Dec 1851[19]
- Louis Gros – Member of the Constitutional Council of France: 1977–1984
- Élisabeth Guigou – Minister of Justice of France: 1997–2000; Minister of Social Affairs of France: 2000–2002
- Alain Joissains – Mayor of Aix-en-Provence: 1978–1983
- Sébastien Jumel – French politician, member of the French Communist Party (PCF)
- Roger Karoutchi – former French Ambassador to the OECD, and former Secretary of State to the French Prime Minister, with responsibility for Relations with Parliament[20]
- Christine Lagarde – Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF): 2011–present; Minister of the Economy, Industry and Employment of France: 2007–2011; Minister of Agriculture of France: May–Jun 2007
- Émile Lisbonne – Minister of Health of France: Oct–Nov 1933; Jan–Feb 1934
- Charles-Marie Livon – Mayor of Marseille: 1895
- Marceau Long – Vice President of the Council of State of France: 1987–1995
- Jean-Charles Marchiani – French prefect and politician
- Léon Martinaud-Déplat – Minister of the Interior of France: 1953–1954; Minister of Justice of France: 1952–1953
- Pierre Moitessier – Director of the National Police of France: 1936–1938; Councillor of State of France: 1938–1944
- Jules-Joseph-Félix-Théodore Onfroy – Mayor of Marseille: 1861–1862
- Germaine Poinso-Chapuis – Minister of Health of France: 1947–1948[21]
- Jean-Étienne-Marie Portalis – Minister of Public Worship of France: 1804–1807[22]
- Patrick Subrémon – French civil servant and prefect
- Jean-Guy Talamoni – President of the Corsican Assembly: 2015–present
- Joseph Thierry – Minister of Public Works of France: Mar–Dec 1913; Minister of Finance of France: Mar–Sep 1917
- Dominique Vian – French overseas departments administrator
Members of the National Assembly of France

Philippe Séguin, President of the National Assembly of France from 1993 to 1997

Patrick Ollier, President of the National Assembly of France from March to June 2007
- Henri Aiguier – Deputy: 1919–1924
- Emmanuel Arène – Deputy: 1881–1885/1886–1889/1889–1893/1893–1898/1898–1902/1902–1904
- Olivier Audibert-Troin – Deputy: 2012–present
- Charles Jean Marie Barbaroux – Deputy: 1792–1793
- Jean-Pierre Bechter – Deputy: 1978–1981/1986–1988
- Joseph Elzéar Dominique Bernardi – Deputy: Apr–Sep 1797
- Roland Blum – Deputy: 1988–1993/1993–1997/1997–2002/2002–2007/2007–2012
- Alfred Borriglione – Deputy: 1876–1894
- Valérie Boyer – Deputy: 2007–2012/2012–present[23][24]
- Marine Brenier – Deputy: 2016–present
- Christophe Castaner – Deputy: 2012–present
- Albert Castelnau – Deputy: 1871–1876/1876–1877
- Raymond Cayol – Deputy: 1946–1951
- Pascal Ceccaldi – Deputy: 1906–1918
- Jean-Baptiste-Amable Chanot – Deputy: 1910–1914
- Jules Charles-Roux – Deputy: 1889–1898
- Jean-David Ciot – Deputy: 2012–present
- Alexandre Clapier – Deputy: 1846–1848/1871–1876
- Gilbert Collard – Deputy: 2012–present
- Jean-Michel Couve – Deputy: 1988–1993/1993–1997/1997–2002/2002–2007/2007–2012/2012–present
- Olivier Darrason – Deputy: 1993–1997
- Gustave Delestrac – Deputy: 1898–1902
- Alfred Donadei – Deputy: 1906–1914
- Toussaint-Bernard Émeric-David – Deputy: 1809–1815
- Sauveur Gandolfi-Scheit – Deputy: 2007–2012/2012–present
- Alphonse Gent – Deputy: Jun–Dec 1848/1871–1881
- Maryse Joissains-Masini – Deputy: 2002–2007/2007–2012[25]
- Bertrand Kern – Deputy: 1998–2002
- Christian Kert – Deputy: 1988–1993/1993–1997/1997–2002/2002–2007/2007–2012/2012–present
- Arthur Malausséna – Deputy: 1892–1893/1894–1898
- Richard Mallié – Deputy: 2002–2007/2007–2012
- Charles Marchal – Deputy: 1898–1902
- Antoine Maure – Deputy: 1902–1906
- Patrick Mennucci – Deputy: 2012–present
- Isidore Méritan – Deputy: 1919–1924
- Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau – President of the National Constituent Assembly of France: Jan–Feb 1791; Deputy: 1789–1791[26]
- Patrick Ollier – President of the National Assembly of France: Mar–Jun 2007; Vice-President of the National Assembly of France: 1998–2002; Deputy: 1988–2002/2002–2010/2012–present
- Rodolphe Pesce – Deputy: 1978–1988
- Michel Pezet – Deputy: 1986–1988/1988–1993
- Pierre Marie Pietri – Deputy: 1848–1849
- Jean Joseph François Poujoulat – Deputy: 1849–1851
- Patrice Prat – Deputy: 2012–present
- François Juste Marie Raynouard – Deputy: 1805–1814/1814–1815
- Simon Renucci – Deputy: 2002–2007/2007–2012
- René Ribière – Deputy: 1958–1962/1967–1978
- Jean-Baptiste Ripert – Deputy: 1902–1906
- Didier Robert – Deputy: 2007–2010
- Philippe Séguin – President of the National Assembly of France: 1993–1997; Vice-President of the National Assembly of France: 1981–1986; Deputy: 1978–1986/1988–2002
- Martial Sicard – Deputy: 1895–1902
- Dominique Tian – Deputy: 2002–2007/2007–2012/2012–present
Members of the Senate of France

Claude-Emmanuel de Pastoret, President of the Chamber of Peers of France from 1829 to 1830
- Félix Anglès – Senator: 1891–1897
- Roger Carcassonne – Senator: 1959–1971
- Jean-Yves Dusserre – Senator: Oct–Dec 2014
- Vincent-Marie Farinole – Senator: 1894–1903
- Francis Giraud – Senator: 1998–2008
- Adrien Gouteyron – Senator: 1978–2011
- Sophie Joissains – Senator: 2008–present
- Philippe Kaltenbach – Senator: 2011–present
- Claude-Emmanuel de Pastoret – President of the Chamber of Peers of France: 1829–1830[27]
- Richard Tuheiava – Senator: 2008–present
Members of the European Parliament
- Marie-Arlette Carlotti – MEP: 1996–2009[28]
- Sylvie Goulard – MEP: 2009–present
Diplomatic service

Kenneth H. Merten, United States Ambassador to Croatia from 2012 to 2015
- Félix de Beaujour – French Ambassador to the United States: 1804
- Alphonse Berns – Ambassador of Luxembourg to the United States: 1991–1998; Permanent Representative of Luxembourg to the UN: 2002–2005; Ambassador of Luxembourg to Belgium: 2005–2011; Permanent Representative of Luxembourg to NATO: 2005–2011; Ambassador of Luxembourg to the UK: 2011–2013[29][30]
- Zouheir Chokr – former Lebanese Ambassador to Qatar, and former President of the Lebanese University[31]
- Jürgen Chrobog – German Ambassador to the United States: 1995–2001[32][33]
- Roland Eng – Cambodian Ambassador to the United States: 2000–2005
- Francois Gordon – British Ambassador to Algeria: 1996–1999; British Ambassador to the Ivory Coast: 2001–2004; British High Commissioner to Uganda: 2005–2008
- Cherif Guellal – post-colonial Algeria's first Ambassador to the United States
- Rolf Kaiser – German Ambassador to the Republic of Cyprus: 2005–2008
- Kenneth H. Merten – United States Ambassador to Haiti: 2009–2012; United States Ambassador to Croatia: 2012–2015[34]
- Alain de Muyser – Ambassador of Luxembourg to Portugal: 2004–2010; Ambassador of Luxembourg to Cape Verde: 2006–2010; Deputy Secretary General of the General Secretariat of the Benelux Union: 2010–present
- Théodore Roustan – Residents-General in Tunisia: 1881–1882; French Ambassador to the United States: 1882–1891; French Ambassador to Spain: 1891–1894
- Walter Jürgen Schmid – German Ambassador to the Russian Federation: 2005–2010; German Ambassador to the Holy See: 2010–2011; German Ambassador to the Republic of Guinea: 1992–1994
Lawyers, judges, and legal academics

Marta Cartabia, current Vice President of the Constitutional Court of Italy
- Peter Annis – Judge of the Federal Court (Canada): 2013–present[35]
- Marta Cartabia – Vice President of the Constitutional Court of Italy: 2014–present; Judge of the Constitutional Court of Italy: 2011–present
- Gaston Crémieux – French lawyer, journalist and writer
- Charles Debbasch – French academic and jurist
- Tony Downes – the Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Professor of Law of the University of Reading[36]
- Charles Annibal Fabrot – French jurisconsult
- Jean-Pierre Gibert – French Canon lawyer
- Claude Jorda – French jurist, former Judge at the International Criminal Court (ICC)
- Jeff Kurzon – American attorney and politician
- Iulia Motoc – Member of the United Nations Human Rights Committee, judge of the Constitutional Court of Romania, and judge of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR)[37]
- Grégoire Mourre – President of the First Civil Division of the Court of Cassation of France: 1811–1815; Chief Prosecutor of the Court of Cassation of France: 1815–1830
- Joseph Louis Elzéar Ortolan – French jurist and former Chair of Comparative Criminal Law at Sorbonne University
- Louis Sarrut – President of the Court of Cassation of France: 1917–1925
- Herdis Thorgeirsdottir – Icelandic lawyer and political scientist
- Colin Tyre, Lord Tyre CBE – Scottish lawyer, former President of the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe, and a Senator of the College of Justice, a judge of the Supreme Courts of Scotland[38][39]
- Albert Jan van den Berg – the Arbitration Chair at Erasmus University Rotterdam and the President of the Netherlands Arbitration Institute
- Prosper Weil – French lawyer, professor emeritus at Panthéon-Assas University, member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques
Arts, literature, humanities, and entertainment
Entertainment
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Bradley Cooper, four-time Academy Award nominee

Jean-Louis Trintignant, winner of the Best Actor Award at the 1969 Cannes Film Festival & the 2013 César Award for Best Actor
- Kiarash Anvari – Iranian film maker, video artist and script writer
- Fanny Ardant – French actress, winner of the 1997 César Award for Best Actress
- Ariane Ascaride – French actress, winner of the 1998 César Award for Best Actress
- Ishmael Bernal – Filipino film, stage and television director
- Carole Bienaimé – French film and television producer
- Robin Campillo – French screenwriter, editor and film director
- Bradley Cooper – American actor and film producer, four-time Academy Award nominee[40][41]
- Philippe Faucon – French film director, screenwriter and producer, winner of the 2016 César Awards for Best Film and Best Adaptation[42]
- Sadaf Foroughi – Iranian film maker, video artist and film editor
- Robert Guédiguian – French film director, actor, screenwriter and producer
- Ken Hom – Chinese American chef, author and British television-show presenter
- Caroline Huppert – French film director and screenwriter, the sister of actress Isabelle Huppert
- Ariane Labed – French actress, who was awarded the Coppa Volpi for the Best Actress at the 67th Venice International Film Festival
- Xavier Laurent – French actor
- Richard Marquand – Welsh film director
- Paul Meurisse – French actor
- Marcel Pagnol – French novelist, playwright, and filmmaker, who became the first filmmaker elected to the Académie Française
- Jean Renoir – French film director, recipient of the Academy Honorary Award, and son of the Impressionist painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir
- Richard Sammel – German actor
- Corinne Touzet – French actress
- Jean-Louis Trintignant – French actor, winner of the Best Actor Award at the 1969 Cannes Film Festival and the 2013 César Award for Best Actor[43]
Historians
- Xavier Accart – French historian of ideas
- Karima Dirèche – French Algerian historian specialising in the contemporary history of the Maghreb
- Marc Fumaroli – French historian and essayist, member of the Académie française, the Académie des Inscriptions, and a foreign member of the British Academy
- Emile Haag – Luxembourgish historian, trade unionist and former principal of the Athénée de Luxembourg
- Bernard Lugan – French historian and Associate Professor of African history at Jean Moulin University Lyon 3
- Antoine Pagi – French ecclesiastical historian
- Régine Pernoud – French historian and medievalist
- Ambroise Roux-Alphéran – French historian
- Abdeljelil Temimi – Tunisian historian
- Matthias Theodor Vogt – German historian and musicologist
Journalism
- Ali Bach Hamba – Tunisian journalist
- Jim Hoagland – American journalist, an associate editor, senior foreign correspondent and columnist for The Washington Post, and two-time recipient of the Pulitzer Prize
- Lutz Kleveman – German investigative journalist and photographer
- François Mignet – French journalist, historian, member of the Académie française and the Académie des sciences morales et politiques
- Jean-Marc Morandini – French journalist
- Terry Phillips – American journalist, author and media consultant
- David Pujadas – French journalist
Literature
- Chris Agee – Irish poet, essayist and editor
- Jean Aicard – French poet, dramatist and novelist, member of the Académie française
- Paul Alexis – French novelist, dramatist and journalist
- Joseph d'Arbaud – French poet
- Christophe Arleston – French comics writer and editor
- Léon de Berluc-Pérussis – French poet and historian
- Mongo Beti – Cameroonian writer
- Beverley Bie Brahic – American poet and translator
- Marcel Brion – French essayist, literary critic, novelist, historian, member of the Académie française
- Ashley Bryan – American writer and illustrator of children's books, winner of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award
- Marion May Campbell – Australian novelist and academic
- Raphaël Confiant – French writer
- Ferdinand Duviard – French writer and novelist
- Jean Echenoz – French writer
- Marian Engel – Canadian novelist
- José Frèches – French historical novelist
- Madeleine Gagnon – Quebec educator, literary critic and writer
- Joachim Gasquet – French author, poet, and art critic
- Sebhat Gebre-Egziabher – Ethiopian writer
- José Giovanni – French writer and film-maker
- Pétur Gunnarsson – Icelandic writer
- Malek Haddad – Algerian poet and writer
- William Kreiten – German literary critic and poet
- Pierre La Mure – French author
- Abdelwahab Meddeb – an award-winning French-language poet, novelist, essayist, translator, editor, Islamic scholar, cultural critic, political commentator, radio producer, public intellectual and professor of comparative literature at Paris West University Nanterre La Défense
- Stoyan Mihaylovski – Bulgarian writer and social figure
- Denise Morel – French writer and psychiatrist
- Suzanne Prou – French novelist, winner of the 1973 Prix Renaudot
- André de Richaud – French poet and writer
- Boris Schreiber – French writer
- Olga Stanisławska – Polish writer
- Patrick Süskind – German writer and screenwriter
- Bahaa Trabelsi – Moroccan novelist
- Ira Trivedi – Indian author, columnist, and yoga Acharya
- Ana Lydia Vega – Puerto Rican writer
- Manuel Veiga – Cape Verdean writer
- Keith Waldrop – American poet, writer and translator, Professor Emeritus at Brown University, winner of the 2009 National Book Award for Poetry[44]
- Rosmarie Waldrop – American poet, translator and publisher[45]
- Choe Yun – Korean writer, winner of the 1994 Yi Sang Literary Award
Music

- Thierry Amiel – French singer and songwriter
- Françoise Atlan – French singer
- Paul Bastide – French conductor and composer
- Emmanuel Boyer de Fonscolombe – French composer
- Régis Campo – French composer
- Anaïs Croze – French singer
- Nick Drake – English singer-songwriter and musician[46]
- Francisco Negrin – award winning stage director working in opera
- Henry Padovani – a musician from the Mediterranean French isle of Corsica, noted for being the original guitarist for the Police
- Mélanie Pain – French indie pop singer
- Jean-Pierre Rampal – French flautist
- Cécile McLorin Salvant – American jazz vocalist, winner of the 2016 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Album[47]
- Nicolas Vatomanga – saxophonist, flutist, bandleader and composer
Visual arts

Paul Cézanne, self-portrait painted in ca. 1875 and now on display at the Orsay Museum
- Gilles Barbier – French contemporary artist[48]
- Paul Cézanne – French artist and Post-Impressionist painter
- Lucien Clergue – French photographer, Chairman of the Academy of Fine Arts
- Michel-François Dandré-Bardon – French history painter and etcher
- Roger Excoffon – French graphic designer
- Xiao Ge – Chinese artist and curator
- Phoebe Gloeckner – American cartoonist, illustrator, painter, and novelist
- Jeremy Houghton – British fine artist
- George Morrison – American landscape painter and sculptor
- Michael Reinhardt – American photographer whose images were featured in magazines such as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar and Sports Illustrated
- Haim Steinbach – American artist
- Parya Vatankhah – Iranian visual artist
- Catherine Walker – designer of Diana, Princess of Wales[49]
Scientists and academics
- Philip Augustine – Indian gastroenterologist
- Philippe Baumard – organizational scientist who has held visiting professorships at New York University, University of California, Berkeley, Stanford University, and is currently École Polytechnique's Chair on Innovation & Regulation, and President of the Scientific Council of France's High Council for Strategic Education and Research[50]
- Ariel Beresniak – Swiss specialist in Public Health and Health Economics
- Saviour Bernard – Maltese medical practitioner, scientist, and major philosopher
- Mounir Bouchenaki – Algerian archaeologist and Director of the Arab Regional Centre for World Heritage
- Jean Boutière – French philologist
- Emmanuel Brunet Jailly – Canadian politics and public policy scholar
- Veronica Dahl – Argentine/Canadian computer scientist
- Michel Darluc – French naturalist
- Marcelo Dascal – Israeli philosopher and linguist, professor of philosophy at Tel Aviv University
- Alexandre del Valle – Italo-French political scientist and geopolitician
- Maurice Dongier – neuropsychiatrist at the Douglas Mental Health University Institute
- François Doumenge – French geographer
- Pierre-Michel Duffieux – French physicist, the founder of Fourier optics
- William A. Earle – American philosopher
- Mansour Mohamed El-Kikhia – Libyan academic and politician
- Pascal Engel – French philosopher, who works on the philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, epistemology and philosophy of logic
- Bruno Étienne – French sociologist and political analyst
- Arthur Fallot – French physician
- F. J. Friend-Pereira – Indian academic and author
- Roger Garaudy – French philosopher
- Pierre Joseph Garidel – French botanist
- Pierre Gassendi – French philosopher, priest, scientist, astronomer and mathematician
- Henri Gastaut – French neurologist
- Antoine Marc Gaudin – professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and a founding member of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE)[51]
- Éric Geoffroy – French philosopher, islamologist, writer and scholar
- Paul Gourret – French zoologist
- Jean-Marc Guichet – French orthopedic surgeon
- Yang Huanming – Chinese genetics researcher, Director of the Beijing Genomics Institute at the Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Fredric Jameson – American literary critic and Marxist political theorist, who has taught at Harvard and Yale[52]
- Eugène Jamot – French physician
- Miro Kačić – Croatian linguist
- Henry-Louis de La Grange – musicologist and biographer of Gustav Mahler
- Saadi Lahlou – Professor in Social Psychology at the London School of Economics (LSE)
- Janja Lalich – Professor of Sociology at California State University, Chico
- Thomas LaMarre – Canadian academic, author, Japanologist and member of the faculty of McGill University
- Henri Lefebvre – French sociologist, Marxist intellectual and philosopher
- Éliane Amado Levy-Valensi – French-Israeli psychologist, psychoanalyst and philosopher
- Joseph Lieutaud – a pediatrician to the Louis XV of France's court, the personal physician to Louis XVI of France, a member of the French Academy of Sciences and of the Royal Society
- Raphaël Liogier – French sociologist, director of the Observatoire du religieux
- Randal Marlin – Canadian philosophy professor at Carleton University
- Jean-François Mattéi – French philosopher
- Marco Tulio Medina – Honduran neurologist and scientist
- Simon Claude Mimouni – French biblical scholar
- Jean-Baptiste Morin – French mathematician, astrologer and astronomer
- Jean-Jacques Nattiez, OC, CQ, FRSC – Canadian semiotician, professor of Musicology at the Université de Montréal
- Nicola Padfield – Head of Fitzwilliam College of the University of Cambridge[53]
- Philip M. Parker – INSEAD Chaired Professor of Management Science[54]
- Elisabeth Pate-Cornell – specialist in engineering risk analysis, and professor of management science at Stanford University[55][56]
- René Pomeau – French scholar, member of the Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques
- Jean-Bernard Racine – Professor of Geography at the Institute of Geography, Faculty of Geosciences and Environment of the University of Lausanne (UNIL) and at HEC Lausanne Business School
- Léon Rostan – French internist, member of the Académie Nationale de Médecine, and foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
- Louis Roule – French zoologist
- Laurent Sagart – director of research at the Centre de recherches linguistiques sur l'Asie orientale, unit of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Enric Sala – marine ecologist and an Explorer-in-Residence at National Geographic
- Peng Shige – Chinese mathematician, member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Jean-Athanase Sicard – French neurologist and radiologist
- Antônio Roberto Monteiro Simões – linguist, an associate professor at the University of Kansas
- Gustavo Uzielli – Italian geologist, historian, and scientist
- Jean Véronis – French linguist, computer scientist and blogger
- Jane Zemiro – Australian academic and author[57]
Business and economics
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Jens Weidmann, 8th & current President of the German Federal Bank
- Olivier Baussan – French businessman, the founder of L'Occitane en Provence, Oliviers & Co and Première Pression Provence
- Sunil Benimadhu – the Chief Executive of the Stock Exchange of Mauritius (SEM): 1998–present[58]
- Philippe Bourguignon – Member of the Board of Directors of eBay, former co-Chief Executive Officer of the World Economic Forum (WEF)[59]
- Pierre Falcone – French businessman, the Chairman of Pierson Capital Group
- Peter Hambro – founder of Peter Hambro Mining and a Non-Executive Director of the Private Banking Division of Société Générale[60]
- Rupert Hambro – British heir, banker, businessman and philanthropist
- Chips Keswick – non-executive director of DeBeers Sa, Investec Bank, Persimmon plc, Arsenal Holdings plc (the parent company of Arsenal F.C.), and former Director of the Bank of England[61]
- Hugh D. MacPhie – Canadian author, consultant, and founder and a principal with MacPhie & Company
- Angus Maddison – British economist, Emeritus Professor at the Faculty of Economics at the University of Groningen
- Jens Weidmann – 8th President of the German Federal Bank: 2011–present; Member of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank (ECB): 2011–present; Governor of the International Monetary Fund (IMF): 2011–present[62]
Sports
- Sandrine Aubert – four-time winner in Alpine Skiing World Cup
- Frédérick Bousquet – French freestyle and butterfly swimmer
- Mohamed Diop – Senegalese basketball player
- Pape Diouf – President of Olympique de Marseille: 2005–2009
- Anthony Giacobazzi – French rugby union player, who plays as scrum half for RC Toulonnais
- Jean-Luc Gripond – President of FC Nantes: 2001–2005
- Jason Lamy-Chappuis – French skier, Olympic gold medallist in combined events 2010
- Alain Mosconi – French swimmer, Olympic medalist and world record holder
- Michel Nandan – Monaco-based motor sport executive
Miscellaneous
- Barry Jean Ancelet – Cajun folklorist, expert in Cajun music and Cajun French
- Isabelle Arvers – French media art curator, critic and author, specializing in video and computer games, web animation, digital cinema, retrogaming, chiptunes and machinima
- Dominique Bénard – former Deputy Secretary-General of the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM)
- Gaston Berger – French futurist, industrialist and philosopher
- James Birch – English art dealer, curator and gallery owner
- Jean-Baptiste de Brancas – Bishop of La Rochelle: 1725–1729; Archbishop of Aix-en-Provence: 1729–1770
- Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux – French naval officer, explorer and colonial governor
- Chucrallah-Nabil El-Hage – Archeparch of the Maronite Catholic Archeparchy of Tyre: 2003–present
- Christopher Fomunyoh – Senior Associate for Africa and Regional Director at the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI)[63]
- Romain Gary – French diplomat, novelist, film director and World War II aviator
- Emmanuel Goffi – French Air Force Officer
- Pascal Lalle – Director of Active Services at the Central Directorate of Public Security: 2012–present
- Dai Llewellyn – Welsh socialite
- Claude Njiké-Bergeret – development aid volunteer
- Jean-Michel Parasiliti di Para, Prince Antoine IV – the head of household for the Kingdom of Araucanía and Patagonia
- Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc – French astronomer, antiquary and savant
- Henri Antoine Marie Teissier – French-Algerian Catholic Bishop and Archbishop Emeritus of Algiers
- Nguyen Xuan Vinh – Commander of Vietnam Air Force: 1958–1962
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