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If it becomes law, it could mean a three-year prison term and $40,000 fine for anyone organizing or entering a child under the age of 16 in a pageant.īut even without American-style Mini Miss Pageants, French girls are bombarded with the message that female worth is all about beauty and sexiness.

So the little girl who takes part believes that her worth is based only on how she looks.īEARDSLEY: Jouanno's amendment is part of a broader bill on women's rights, which will now proceed to the National Assembly, the French Parliament's Lower House, for another vote. SENATOR CHANTAL JUANNO: (Through Translator) The problem with these pageants is they're only based on appearance and the ideas of feminine seduction. If it's up to Senator Chantal Jouanno, who sponsored the amendment in the Senate, they could disappear altogether. Mini Miss Pageants, as they're called in France - with heavily made-up, dressed-up young girls - are fairly new here. And, in doing so, contradict the normal and harmonious development of a child. Psychiatrist Jean Paul Pennera, speaking in the French television documentary "Mini Miss Phenomenon," explains why the pageants are harmful.īEARDSLEY: They give a very sexualized image of kids who aren't even in puberty, he says. The phenomenon is largely viewed as a sordid offshoot of American culture. NPR's Eleanor Beardsley reports that lawmakers see this move as a way to protect the young from being sexualized.ĮLEANOR BEARDSLEY, BYLINE: Several documentaries about child beauty pageants in America have shocked the French in recent years. The measure is part of a larger bill on women's rights. The French Senate voted to ban beauty pageants for children under 16.
