Francisca Van Dunem (1955- )

May 22, 2019 
/ Contributed By: Robert Fikes

Francisca Van Dunem

Francisca Van Dunem

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Francisca Van Dunem (née Francisca Eugénia da Silva Dias Van Dunem), an attorney and politician, became the first person of African-descent to serve as a cabinet minister in Portugal. Born on November 5, 1955 in Luanda, Angola, Van Dunem was one of six children born to prominent parents, Mateus Vieira Van Dunem and the former Antonia Sardinha da Silva.

In 1973, Van Dunem moved to Portugal in pursuit of educational mobility but soon had to return to Angola when the nation declared its independence. After a year of political unrest and the killing of her brother and sister-in-law, Van Dunem, along with her parents and an orphaned nephew, settled in Portugal. Africans comprised approximately one percent of the population, excluding those residing in the country illegally. The country also contained people of color—mainly emigrants and their descendants from the Portuguese possessions of Cape Verde, Mozambique, Angola, and its former colony, Brazil, who were generally disregarded and lived on the margins of society. Van Dunem resumed her studies at the University of Lisbon (Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Direito) where she received her law degree in July 1977.

Immediately after completion, Van Dunem began her legal career as a specialist in criminal law at the University of Lisbon from 1977 to 1979. In the 1980s, she was syndication and survey advisor at Alta Autoridade contra a Corrupção (High Authority Against Corruption). She became a public prosecutor in Lisbon, worked in the Attorney General’s Office, and was director of the Department of Investigation and Penal Action of Lisbon from 2001 until 2007. In 2007, she was appointed Attorney General for the District of Lisbon. Beyond Lisbon, Van Dunem served on a number of councils and committees that reviewed crime and criminal procedures across Portugal as well as Europe which augmented her career profile.

Because of her storied legal career, Prime Minister António Costa appointed Van Dunem as Portugal’s Minister of Justice in November 2015. The event occurred without great fanfare although the press did not mention it as a front-page item. Although she kept a low profile, Van Dunem on occasions reacted to racial insults directed at her.

Van Dunem returned to her birthplace in Angola in 2017. She is married to attorney and university professor Eduardo Paz Ferreira. They both have one son and live in suburban Lisbon.

About the Author

Author Profile

Robert Fikes, Jr., a 1970 graduate of Tuskegee University, earned graduate degrees in modern European history and library science at the University of Minnesota. Retired since 2017, he worked as a reference librarian at San Diego State University where he was also a subject bibliographer for Africana Studies, European, American, Middle Eastern, and African history. Fikes has published numerous journal articles, essays, encyclopedia entries, newspaper and magazine contributions, bibliographies, and several print and online books pertaining to history, art, and literature.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Fikes, R. (2019, May 22). Francisca Van Dunem (1955- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/global-african-history/van-dunem-francisca-1955/

Source of the Author's Information:

Filipe Araujo, “The Justice Minister is Black But in Portugal I’m Still a ‘Nigga’” at https://medium.com/@felipearaujo22/the-justice-minister-might-be-black-but-in-portugal-i-m-still-a-nigga-8c18d4f6d1d7; Portuguese government Internet site on Francisca Van Dunem at https://www.portugal.gov.pt/en/gc21/ministries/justice; “Van Dunem é a grande surpresa na Justiça” at https://www.jornaldenegocios.pt/economia/politica/detalhe/van_dunen_e_a_grande_surpresa_na_justica.

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