Originally from Saint-Claude, Guadeloupean Mélodie Ambroise, was appointed on October 25, parliamentary advisor, digital inclusion and online child protection. At 34, the young woman therefore joined the cabinet of Claire Chappaz, the Secretary of State to the Minister of Higher Education and Research, in charge of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and digital technology.
Digital inclusion and online child protection are the missions assigned to Mélodie Ambroise, the new parliamentary advisor in the cabinet of Clara Chappaz, the Secretary of State in charge of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and digital.
A former student of the Lycée Gerville-Réache in Basse-Terre, the Guadeloupean originally from Saint-Claude holds a Master II in International Economic Affairs, specializing in Latin America (La Sorbonne), and a degree in foreign languages from the University of Montpellier. She also completed her course with continuing education at the INSP (formerly ENA).
A specialist in cryptoassets, Mélodie Ambroise served for 3 years within ADAN (Association for the Development of Digital Assets), an association which brings together more than 200 companies, as Director of Strategy and Institutional Relations. Like Bitcoin, the best known of them, cryptoassets, commonly called “cryptocurrencies”, were designed as instruments of exchange in the digital world. Overall, cryptoassets represent virtual assets stored on an electronic medium allowing a community of users accepting them as payment to carry out transactions without having to resort to legal tender.
As part of her duties, she notably worked on the regulatory framework for this new asset class, as well as on digital identity issues and new video games. using cryptoassets.
Before that, she was for 3 years the parliamentary collaborator of Pierre Person, elected deputy for the sixth constituency of Paris (XIe and 20e district) over the period 2017-2022. In this capacity, she contributed to the information mission on virtual currencies carried out at the National Assembly by Éric Woerth, as president, and Pierre Person, as rapporteur. It also included among its members, Jean-Noël Barrot (now Minister of Europe and Foreign Affairs) and Éric Coquerel (current president of the Finance Committee of the National Assembly).