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Arthur Lemoine becomes CEO of Galeries Lafayette

Arthur Lemoine becomes CEO of Galeries Lafayette

Fashion United6 days ago
Galeries Lafayette Group has announced the appointment of Arthur Lemoine as its chief executive officer. He takes up the role from Monday, July 7, 2025. Lemoine succeeds Nicolas Houzé, chairman of the management board of the French department store group.
Lemoine is 40 years old. He holds a master's degree in mathematics from Paris Dauphine University and a degree from ESSEC Business School. He is a member of the group's management board and a director of Lafayette Anticipations – Galeries Lafayette corporate foundation.
In 2010, he joined the company as a buyer in the Perfumery department of Galeries Lafayette and BHV Marais and took over its management three years later.
In 2015, he was appointed director of the Food and Beverage division. He notably led the opening of 'Eataly Paris Marais', dedicated to Italian gastronomy.
In 2018, he became chairman of the Watchmaking and Jewellery division of Galeries Lafayette.
In 2021, he became director of Product Range and Purchasing, within the executive committee of Galeries Lafayette, a position he still holds today.
In his new role, which is now in effect, Lemoine will be responsible for "supporting a new stage of the company's development. He will continue to grow the leadership of the department stores and the influence of the brand, in France and beyond, in flagships as well as online." Arthur Lemoine now CEO Galeries Lafayette Group
The group asserts that, in recent years, Lemoine has actively contributed to the modernisation of the product range and the transformation carried out by the flagship store on Boulevard Haussmann in Paris.
In the press release, Houzé stated: "After more than 10 years marked by numerous transformations and challenges, Galeries Lafayette is ready to open a new chapter under Lemoine's leadership. Lemoine has an intimate understanding of the company's challenges and ambitions. His strategic vision, his ability to unite people and his knowledge of the fashion and retail sectors make him the ideal leader to drive this new dynamic."
Lemoine responded: "For more than 15 years, I have had the privilege of contributing to the development of this unique family business venture. It showcases the best of creation to the widest possible audience by promoting a certain vision of the French art de vivre. I am fully aware of the responsibility that falls to me." This article was translated to English using an AI tool.
FashionUnited uses AI language tools to speed up translating (news) articles and proofread the translations to improve the end result. This saves our human journalists time they can spend doing research and writing original articles. Articles translated with the help of AI are checked and edited by a human desk editor prior to going online. If you have questions or comments about this process email us at info@fashionunited.com
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Smoke and mirrors surround so-called pilot scheme allowing alcohol at Scottish football
Smoke and mirrors surround so-called pilot scheme allowing alcohol at Scottish football

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Smoke and mirrors surround so-called pilot scheme allowing alcohol at Scottish football

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... It has been billed as a potential step change in the matchday experience for Scottish football fans, marking the beginning of the end for a ban on alcohol that has been in place across the nation's stadiums for nearly 45 years. But amid a flurry of headlines surrounding the so-called 'wet run' that will see a handful of clubs allow a limited number of supporters to drink in designated areas at a series of upcoming fixtures, experts have cast doubt on the initiative, describing it as 'misleading' and questioning how it will be evaluated. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The widely publicised venture began yesterday at two Premier Sports Club ties, with both Arbroath and Stirling Albion allowing fans to purchase alcoholic drinks in special fan zones and a concourse area out of sight of the pitch. They will soon be followed by up to five other clubs, including Ayr United, Partick Thistle, and Queen of the South. Amid similar moves to allow alcohol trials in the English game, the apparent development has been welcomed by many supporters in Scotland, many of whom have long bemoaned the lack of parity with other sports, such as rugby, where alcohol is available for purchase and consumption. The sale of alcohol within football grounds has long been prohibited, save for hospitality sections. Picture: Stock Adobe | zef art - Even so, there is uncertainty surrounding the scope of the so-called pilot scheme, and at a time when Scotland continues to suffer from a toxic relationship with alcohol, with First Minister John Swinney's administration treating its harms as a public health emergency, others stressed the folly of undermining efforts in aid of that goal. 'Presenting it as a pilot is misleading' The Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL) has said that with 'close oversight' from licensing boards, local authorities, and Police Scotland, the offering by the clubs was a 'welcome step' in its aim to improve the experience of football supporters who turn up week in, week out, to follow their teams. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It said feedback would be gathered from fans, as part of a 'welcome step' in its aim to ensure they 'receive parity' with other sporting, social and cultural events across the country, where alcohol can be consumed. Unsurprisingly, such comments have led to reporting that a ban on alcohol in Scottish football stadiums is being 'lifted'. That is, for the moment at least, not the case. Alcohol has been sold in the hospitality sections of stadiums for years, and records maintained by local authority licensing boards show that several of the clubs involved in the latest initiative, including Arbroath and Ayr, have successfully applied for what is known as occasional licences, which allow for the sale of temporary alcohol in other areas. The routine mechanism has been in place for years, and has been widely utilised by clubs up and down the country, including a recent Old Firm tie hosted by Rangers. Tellingly, at no point has the SPFL itself referred to the latest plans as a 'pilot scheme' - that tag has been assigned by the media, commentators, and fans. 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Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Laura Mahon, deputy chief executive of Alcohol Focus Scotland, also said it was wrong to characterise what is on offer as 'the lifting of Scotland's alcohol ban at football,' explaining: 'It's standard match day hospitality using an existing legislation. Presenting it as a pilot is misleading.' Even so, the publicity surrounding the drinks sales at the cluster of cup ties continues to resonate, particularly among those old enough to recall the dark days which presaged a crackdown on boozing inside stadiums. The game that changed it all In one of the most infamous games in Scottish football history, Celtic secured a 1-0 extra time victory over Rangers in the 1980 Scottish Cup final, but few recall the score. The fixture came a week after Aberdeen saw off the Glasgow giants to claim the league title, and with Dundee United having earlier claimed the League Cup, tensions were running high ahead of a tie in which losers would end the season empty handed. Come full time, that pent up aggression led to hundreds of fans invading the pitch, with bricks, bottles and cans hurled as mounted police attempted to quell the violent clashes. One eyewitness in attendance, the veteran football commentator, Archie MacPherson, infamously described it as 'like a scene out of Apocalypse Now.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Mounted police face the fans before crowd trouble broke out after the Old Firm Scottish Cup Final at Hampden in May 1980, which Celtic won 1-0. While there were criticisms of the policing operation and the barriers at Scotland's national stadium, the cursed drink was singled out by George Younger, the then Scottish secretary, as the main contributing factor. 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But so too, the way in which fans engage with the game has changed, with families and children among a more diverse make-up, and supporters more generally less focused on the consumption of alcohol as part of their matchday experience. Dr Geoff Pearson, a law professor at the University of Manchester, who is regarded as one of the UK's leading experts on football-related disorder, told Scotland on Sunday that while the legislation brought in in the 1980s was probably needed at the time, the norms of fan behaviour had changed 'radically' since then. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He said that the evidence of the effectiveness of alcohol restrictions in terms of reducing drunkenness and disorder around football was 'mixed,' with some studies even suggesting that prohibitions could be counterproductive by encouraging binge drinking prior to games. 'I think it is time to revisit the criminalisation of the consumption of alcohol in stadia, and investigating different ways of permitting alcohol consumption at matches, without increasing risks to public order or safety, seems a sensible move,' he said. Ayr United have been granted alcohol licences for the matches against Arbroath and Forfar Athletic. | SNS Group It is clear that a growing groundswell of fans also want change. Research published this year by the Scottish Football Supporters Association (SFSA), which found that nearly three quarters of fans (74 per cent) agreed that, in principle, all fans should be able to buy alcohol at grounds during match days Stuart Murphy, CEO of the SFSA, said the advent of the pilot was a 'significant' step, and expressed hope that it would ultimately lead to more fans being allowed to have a drink at stadiums when cheering on their teams. 'It's looked unlikely for a long time, and in all the conversations I've had with the Scottish Government, they've been really reluctant to go down this road, but I think we're long overdue to give this a go,' he said. 'It is pretty unfair that Scottish football fans are treated differently to fans of other sports, and the world has changed.' Money, undoubtedly, is also a factor in the latest alcohol sales push, with a growing number of clubs looking to new revenue streams in order to make ends meet, let alone turn a profit. Indeed, several of the sides involved in the pilot reported losses in their most recent annual accounts. Alcohol sales would never come close to rivalling other valuable income sources, such as SPFL payments, especially when costs such as mitigation measures and infrastructural improvements are factored in, but every little would help. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Public health concerns remain Many, however, will ask at what cost? Ms Mahon said the amount of drink that will be on offer to fans at the games - five pints - almost met the weekly low-risk alcohol limit, and described it as an 'excessive' amount that raised serious concerns about responsible practice. 'Scotland is in the grip of an alcohol crisis, with deaths at a 15-year high and alcohol consumption 50 per cent above the chief medical officer's low-risk guidelines,' she insisted. 'This is not the moment to start chipping away the protective measures we have in place. Even without alcohol in stadiums we still see violent disorder during or immediately after football matches in Scotland, as well as spikes in domestic violence. Increasing the availability of alcohol would only add fuel to those fires.' Alcohol deaths in Scotland are the highest in the UK 'Meanwhile, allowing alcohol sales inside grounds would further entrench the role of alcohol sponsors in football. 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Ruabon: 'Characterful' Wynnstay Hall estate home up for sale
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Trump announces 30% tariffs on imports from EU and Mexico
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