Marie-Paule Malliavin
Marie-Paule Malliavin, née Brameret, was a French mathematician who specialised in the field of algebra.
Family
She was married to the mathematician Paul Malliavin since 27 April 1965. They had two children.Career
She published her first mathematical article in 1960 and received her doctorate in 1965.After her doctorate, she first became maître de conférences at the University of Caen. Later she became a professor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris, where she remained until her retirement.
Her mathematical students include Jacques Alev and Youssef El From. She wrote several textbooks; the books on commutative algebra and representation theory of finite groups are frequently cited.
At the beginning of her career, she worked on commutative algebra, later on non-commutative algebra. This was at a time when enveloping algebras and then quantum groups were evolving. She collaborated with her husband Paul Malliavin in particular in the study of measures on infinite-dimensional groups.
Marie-Paule Malliavin was editor of top-ranked international research journals. She also organised the Algebra Seminar at the Institut Henri Poincaré for several decades, succeeding the deceased Professor Paul Dubreil.