Alexandre Havard
Alexandre Havard | |
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Alexandre_Havard.JPG | |
Born | February 7, 1962 |
🏳️ Nationality | French |
💼 Occupation | Writer & Founder |
Known for | Author of Virtuous Leadership, Founder of Havard Virtuous Leadership Institute |
👴 👵 Parent(s) | Cyril Havard, Irene Gedevanishvili |
🌐 Website | HVLI |
Alexandre Havard (born 1962) is the author of Virtuous Leadership: An Agenda for Personal Excellence (New York, 2007) and Created for Greatness: The Power of Magnanimity (Washington, 2011). Since 2007 "Virtuous Leadership" has been translated into 20 languages.
Alexandre Havard is also the founder of the Virtuous Leadership Institute, which promotes the classical virtues as the basis of effective leadership.
Born in France, Havard studied law in Paris (1981-1986) and served as a barrister in Strasbourg (1987-1989) and Helsinki. Since 2007, he has been living and working in Moscow.
Alexandre Havard's father, Cyril Havard (1929- ), is the son of Russian emigrants, Pavel Havard-Dianin (1903-1980) and Nina Anossova (1903-1998), who fled St. Petersburg during the Bolshevik Revolution and settled, in the early 1920s, in Paris. His mother, Irene Gedevanishvili (1938-2011), is the daughter of Artchil Gedevanishvili (1898-1971), a Georgian aristocrat, who left the Soviet Union in 1926 and settled in Paris where he married Madeleine Ducrocq (1898-1975), the daughter of a French Army General.
Havard is a numerary member of the Catholic personal prelature of Opus Dei.[1]
References[edit]
- ↑ Havard, Alexandre (2016). My Russian Way: A Spiritual Autobiography. University of Mary. ISBN 9780965288095. Retrieved 10 February 2020. Search this book on
External links[edit]
- Official homepage of the Havard Virtuous Leadership Institute
- Briefly Noted at First Things
- Leadership for Anyone at Zenit (Interview With Author Alexandre Havard)
- Review of Alexandre Havard's book "Created for Greatness", CW Report, Feb 7, 2015
- On Leadership and Virtue: A Conversation with Alexandre Havard, Crisis Magazine, June 9, 2011
- Rhetoric matters. So do our lives. National Review, December 7, 2015
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