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  1. Iveta Radičová (Bratislava, 7 dicembre 1956) è una politica slovacca, Presidente del Governo della Repubblica Slovacca dall'8 luglio 2010 al marzo 2012, come leader di una coalizione di centro-destra costituita da quattro partiti, unitisi dopo le elezioni del 2010. È stata la prima donna a ricoprire la carica di premier in ...

  2. Iveta Radičová je bývalá predseda vlády Slovenskej republiky, ministerka práce, sociálnych vecí a rodiny a podpredsedníčka strany SDKÚ-DS. Na Wikipédii nájdete podrobné informácie o její živote, kariére, politickej činnosti a osobitosti.

    • Early Life
    • Political Career
    • Prime Minister of Slovakia
    • Post-Premiership

    Childhood and education

    Iveta Karafiátová was born in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia, on 7 December 1956. She has said that her father was strict, while she compared her mother to an angel. Karafiátová grew up in poverty, which she attributed to the country's communist governance and her father's inability to succeed under it. When her father took her to enroll in school, the headmaster had her skip kindergarten after learning that she could read. She practiced dance throughout her childhood, quitting when she was sixte...

    Academic career and activism

    Radičová began working as the head of the Slovak Academy of Sciences' family research team in 1979, where she studied how communist states such as Slovakia could implement family policy.: 240 Unlike most academics in her field, she did not join the Communist Party of Slovakia or study Marxism–Leninism. Instead, she specialized in methodology, a field which demanded less ideological adherence.: 559 Even then, she was relatively open about her anti-communistbeliefs. As the Velvet Revolution was...

    Entering Parliament

    Mikuláš Dzurinda succeeded Mečiar as prime minister in 1998 as part of a democratic coalition government, and he appointed Radičová as Minister of Labor, Social Affairs, and Family in 2005.: 241 Though she was not an elected politician, she was chosen as she had expertise in the area. She had difficulty adjusting to and working with her colleagues: she did not make strong allies among her peers in minister positions or her subordinates within her own ministry. Radičová left her position the f...

    2009 presidential campaign

    Radičová was the opposition candidate in the 2009 presidential election. Officially running with the SDKÚ-DS, she was also endorsed by the Christian Democratic Movement, the Party of the Hungarian Coalition, and the Civic Conservative Party. She had to convince the Christian Democratic Movement to support her through negotiations, as they disapproved of her relatively liberal positions on family and gender. She agreed to make a statement of neutrality on the subject in exchange for their supp...

    Resignation and reelection

    After the presidential election, Radičová became the subject of a political scandal. On 21 April 2010, when her fellow legislator Tatiana Rosová was absent from the parliament building, Radičová cast a vote on her behalf against parliamentary rules. Radičová resigned from her seat two days later. She retained her position as SDKÚ-DS's deputy leader, and she defeated Ivan Mikloš in a content for the top spot on the party's candidate list for the 2010 parliamentary election.: 244 Though the SDK...

    In addition to her own SDKÚ-DS, Radičová's coalition government included the Christian Democratic Movement, Freedom and Solidarity, and a new pro-Hungarian party, Most–Híd. The circumstances of her premiership led her to be known as an "accidental prime minister".: 245 Radičová's position as prime minister was fragile. Her relationships with major ...

    Radičová was succeeded by her predecessor, Robert Fico.: 246 After leaving politics, Radičová returned to Comenius University, where she continued teaching. She renounced her membership with SDKÚ-DS, including her position as deputy party leader, on 3 May 2012. Radičová was chosen as Dean of the Faculty of Mass Media at the Pan-European University ...

  3. 14 mag 2019 · Iveta Radičová è nata il 7 Dicembre 1956 a Bratislava, in Slovacchia, ed è stata nominata Coordinatrice Europea per il Corridoio Mediterraneo TEN-T il 16 Settembre 2018, succedendo a Laurens Jan Brinkhorst.

  4. Iveta Radičová is a professor of sociology at the Bratislava International School of Liberal Arts and Dean of Media Faculty at the Paneuropean University in Bratislava. Prior to the positions as Slovakia’s Prime Minister (2010-2012) and Minister of Defence (2011-2012), she was a member of the Slovak National Parliament and served as ...

  5. Radičová, Iveta. – Donna politica slovacca (n. Bratislava 1956). Dopo gli studi in sociologia all’univ. di Bratislava, ha intrapreso la carriera universitaria presso il medesimo ateneo.

  6. Prof. PhDr. Iveta Radičová, PhD., rod. Karafiátová (* 7. december 1956, Bratislava) je slovenská sociologička, bývalá predsedníčka vlády Slovenskej republiky a bývalá podpredsedníčka politickej strany SDKÚ-DS. V rokoch 2005 až 2006 bola ministerkou práce, sociálnych vecí a rodiny.