Loi Marthe Richard
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"Online facsinilie".
| Loi Marthe Richard | |
|---|---|
| National Assembly (France) | |
| |
| Citation | Loi n°46-685 du 13 avril 1946 "Online facsinilie". |
| Territorial extent | Metropolitan France |
| Enacted by | National Assembly (France) |
| Enacted | 13 April 1946 |
| Commenced | 14 April 1946 |
| Introduced by | Marthe Richard |
| Status: In force | |
Loi Marthe Richard (Marthe Richard Law) of 13 April 1946 abolished the regime of regulated prostitution in France that had been in force since 1804. It required the closure of brothels ("maisons de tolérance"), and the abolition of the Regulation System or registered prostitution. The law bears the name of Marthe Richard, who was a municipal councillor of Paris but not a parliamentary representative.[1]
On 13 December 1945, Marthe Richard, elected councillor of the 4th arrondissement of Paris, presented to the Conseil municipal de Paris a proposal for the closure of Paris brothels.[2] In her speech, she did not attack prostitutes as much as society, responsible in her view for "organised and patent debauchery" and organized crime, which she argued benefitted from regulated prostitution. She also reminded the council that prostitutes were complicit with the German occupation during WW2.[3] The proposal was voted and on 20 December 1945, the police prefect, Charles Luizet, was authorised to close, without notice, the houses of prostitution in the Department of the Seine within 3 months (by 15 March 1946 at the latest).
Encouraged by this success, Marthe Richard started a press campaign for a vote on a law generalising these measures to all France.[4] It was supported by the Ligue pour le relèvement de la moralité publique (League of Social and Moral Action) and by the Minister of Public Health and Population, Robert Prigent.[3]
On 9 April 1946, MP Marcel Roclore presented the report of the Committee on the Family, Population and Public Health, and concluded that the closure of brothels was necessary. The deputy Pierre Dominjon, member of the Ligue pour le relèvement de la moralité publique, tabled a proposal for a law which was voted on 13 April 1946 in the Chamber of Deputies. The closure of brothels took effect from 6 November 1946. Withdrawing the administrative authorizations without compensation marked the end of legalisation and the start of a policy of abolitionism.[5]