Category Archives: news

French vaccine passport enters into force from 24 January 2022

The French parliament approved the implementation of a vaccine passport scheme across France on 16 January 2022. Coming into force on 24 January 2022, the new law will require individuals to present a certificate of vaccination when entering public spaces such as restaurants and bars, cinemas, museums and galleries, and long-distance trains. Previously, individuals were able to present either proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test result. The latter will no longer be accepted for anyone over aged 15. Individuals will also have to present a form of photo ID when their vaccine passport is being scanned.

The vaccine passport, known as a pass vaccinal in French, will not be required to take public transport or to go shopping, nor to see a medical professional (though individuals are still required to present a negative Covid test in order to be seen by medical professionals).

All vaccines recognised by the European Medicines Agency will be compatible with the new vaccine passport.

France will accept the UK’s proof of COVID-19 recovery and vaccination record. If you are travelling with a printed PDF proof of vaccination status, it must date from 1 November or after to ensure that the certificate can be scanned successfully, if domestic certification is required. Your NHS appointment card from vaccination centres is not designed to be used as proof of vaccination and should not be used to demonstrate your vaccine status.

Those vaccinated in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland can also choose to scan and save the NHS QR code into France’s “TousAntiCovid” app.

Please refer to instructions from both the French government and also your home country’s local French embassy for details on converting a non-EU vaccine certificate into a French/EU vaccine certificate.

Photo: la-croix.com

How to Get a Covid-19 Test in Paris

If you find yourself in need of a Covid-19 test in Paris, you have many options to choose from.

Antigen (also known as lateral flow) tests administered by a pharmacy

These are rapid tests which provide a result within 15 to 30 minutes. They are widely available and the cheaper option.

Most pharmacies across the city offer antigen tests without an appointment.

If you do not have French health insurance, the test will cost between 22 and 30 euros. If you do not have French health insurance, but you do have a European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) or a the new UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC), present this at the pharmacy as you may be eligible for a reduced rate.

There are also many testing tents (see above photo) in main streets which provide tests with out appointments. Often you will scan a QR code and fill in a form whilst waiting in line for the test.

Self-administered antigen (lateral flow) test

Known as an autotest in French, these types of tests are sold in pharmacies and are widely available.

Sold individually for 5 euros or in kits of 5 tests for around 20 euros, these tests are the cheapest options currently available if you do not have French health insurance.

You will not receive a certificate with this type of test and so they cannot be used if you intend to travel.

PCR tests administered by a pharmacy or laboratory

PCR tests take longer to receive a result (around 24 hours) and are more expensive but may be required for travel to certain countries and are considered more accurate.

These tests are carried out by medical professionals in laboratories, private clinics or testing centres.

PCR tests cost from €44, and up to €80. If you do not have French health insurance, but you do have a European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) or a the new UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC), present this at the pharmacy as you may be eligible for a reduced rate.

The French government have a website allowing you to search for testing locations near you: https://www.sante.fr/cf/centres-depistage-covid/departement-75-paris.html

Select your departement (75 for Paris), your test type (RT-PCR or Antigenique) and open to everyone (ouverts à tout public)

You will be able to see a drop down from each testing location giving details such as address, opening hours, and whether they require an appointment (uniquement avec rendez-vous) or not (sans rendez-vous).

They will likely provide a website or phone number to book an appointment, if required.

Alternatively, you can book a PCR test through the Doctolib app or on Doctolib.fr

Log in or create an account and then search for dépistage PCR or dépistage antigénique and search for test appointment slots near you. It will show a screen like the one below.

 

Image: Cecile D. Sortir à Paris.

Travelling to France from the UK: what you need to know

This is a short guide for students joining us this January who are arriving from the UK.

If you are travelling to France from a country other than the UK, please view current guidance from the French government here: https://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/en/coming-to-france/coming-to-france-your-covid-19-questions-answered/

The below information is specific to travel to France from the United Kingdom only.

The rules for vaccinated travellers have changed as of Friday 14 January 2022:

  • You do not need to present a motif impérieux (compelling reason) to enter France.
  • You do not need to complete a passenger locator form.
  • You do not need to isolate on arrival in France.

Vaccinated travellers must provide at border control:

  • Proof of your negative test result dated within 24 hours of departure*
  • Proof of vaccination
  • Sworn Statement: this form must be completed and signed to state that you have no symptoms of covid and have not been in contact with anyone who has tested positive.

All documents can be found here: https://www.interieur.gouv.fr/Actualites/L-actu-du-Ministere/Certificate-of-international-travel

Make sure you check your travel provider’s website for their own Covid requirements.

 

*This cannot be a NHS test. It must be a private PCR or antigen (lateral flow) test that will provide you with a “fit to fly/travel” certificate. Your travel provider will most likely be able to provide a list of test providers – but do not wait until the last minute to book!

 

 

For unvaccinated travellers see below:

Booking journey and accommodation

You will need to book your train or flight and read up on your travel provider’s own Covid requirements on their website.

If you have not yet sorted longer-term accommodation, you may wish to book accommodation for the first 10 days as the current French government restrictions require UK travellers to isolate for up to 10 days.

Pre-departure Testing

All travellers coming from the UK to France must take a PCR or antigen test within 24 hours of departure.

This cannot be an NHS test. You will need to book a test that will provide you with a “fit to fly/travel” certificate. Your travel provider will most likely be able to provide a list of test providers – but do not wait until the last minute to book!

Documents to bring with you

Prepare all the documents you will need to present at border control.

They can be found here: https://www.interieur.gouv.fr/Actualites/L-actu-du-Ministere/Certificate-of-international-travel

  • Form detailing your “compelling reason” or pressing grounds to enter France:
    • If you have a French visa, tick the box “Third-country citizens who hold a valid French or European residence permit or long-stay visa ………. “
    • If you did not apply for a visa, tick the box “Students enrolled in French as a foreign language (FLE) courses prior to enrolment higher education, or admitted to the orals of competitive examinations in French higher education institutions, or enrolled for the start of the 2021-2022 academic year……..”
  • Proof of your “compelling reason” to enter France
    • this will be your visa or your status letter from the Kent Paris Office if you did not apply for a visa.
  • Passenger Locator Form (eOS): this is a form similar to the current UK passenger locator form and requires you to provide details of your address and contact details and will then produce a form with a QR code which you will be required to present for inspection at border control.
  • Sworn Statement: this form must be compeleted and signed to state that you have no symptoms of covid and have not been in contact with anyone who has tested positive.

Isolating in France

All travellers arriving from the UK must self-isolate on arrival in France, either for 48 hours following your arrival, or for a full 10 days:

Test to Release

If you chose to take a PCR or antigen test after 48 hours of arrival in France, you have many options to choose from.

If you are not registered with French national health inusrance:

  • PCR tests cost from €44
  • Antigen tests cost €22 to €30

Most pharmacies across the city offer antigen tests without an appointment.

There are also many testing tents in main streets which provide tests with out appointments. Often you will scan a QR code and fill in a form whilst waiting in line for the test.

We recommend taking an antigen test as they are widely available, cheaper, and you will have your results within 30 minutes or so.

 

Changes in Travel from the UK to France

The French government is instituting new restrictions for those travelling from the UK into France from Saturday, 18 December, and for an undetermined amount of time. Here are the headlines:

  • Both non-vaccinated and vaccinated people will be required to have a “compelling reason” (motif impérieux) to travel to or from the UK.
    • Anyone with a visa will normally be permitted to enter France. 
    • It is our understanding that studies constitute a “compelling reason” to enter France so long as they are able to demonstrate that they have been accepted onto a course in France. 
  • On departure, vaccinated people will have to present a negative PCR or lateral flow test less than 24 hours old. This cannot be an NHS test. You will need to book a test that will provide you with a “fit to fly/travel” certificate. Your travel provider will most likely be able to provide a list of test providers.
  • Before travelling, anyone coming from the UK will be required to register on a digital platform (in a similar format to the current UK passenger locator form) allowing them, among other things, to state the address for their stay in France. https://passager.serveureos.org/  This platform will generate prefectural orders requiring all non-vaccinated and vaccinated travellers to isolate in their chosen place. This requirement to isolate can be lifted after 48 hours, on condition of a negative test result. 
    • This requirement suggests that anyone entering France from the UK will be required to book accommodation prior to arrival for up to 10 days. As we are still learning more about the requirements and how they will be applied, we recommend that anyone making a booking straight away book something that is cancellable/refundable. You may also wish to wait to book something until January when the situation becomes clearer. 

-The first details your reason for coming to France (Travel Certificate to Metropolitan France).

-The second is a Sworn Statement (“Engagemnet sur l’honneur”) that you do not have Covid symptoms, have not been in contact with anyone who has tested positive, you will take a lateral flow test on arrival to France, and you will quarantine on arrival. The French government have stated that checks will be organized to ensure these measures are properly implemented.

 

Despite these stricter measures, we would like to reassure you that a similar situation took place at this time last year. All students registered on our programmes with a term in Paris were suddenly faced with the same requirement of demonstrating a compelling reason to be in France, and each of them was able to safely cross the border upon presentation of the requisite documents. 

We will continue to monitor the situation and update you when we return from the Christmas break. By that point, we are likely to have more information on requirements and also how the various requirements will be applied. 

Students who have not applied for a visa for the upcoming semester should expect to receive a status letter from the Kent Paris office on Monday, 10 January attesting to their future studies with us in Paris. In these instances, the more recent the status letter, the better. For that reason, we will not be issuing status letters prior to the 10th. With that said, Kent staff will be back in the office on Tuesday, 4th January, and you are welcome to get in touch with any questions.

 

Photograph: Getty Images

Covid-19 Booster Vaccinations in France

All information up to date as of 4 January 2022:

You do not have to be registered in the French healthcare system to receive a Covid-19 vaccine but you must prove that you legally reside in France e.g. a Visa, a Carte de Séjour, or proof of address (electricity bill etc.).

This guide is about how to access an additional Covid-19 vaccination injection (a booster shot) after the completion of your original vaccination scheme. In France, you must meet official vaccination requirements to be provided with a Covid health pass called a Pass Sanitaire, allowing you to enter restaurants, museums, cinemas etc. Read our guide to the Pass Sanitaire here.

This booster vaccination guide is relevant if you completed your original vaccination scheme with a vaccine authorized by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) – Pfizer-BioNTech (Comirnaty), Moderna, AstraZeneca (Vaxzevria), Johnson & Johnson (Janssen), or AstraZeneca (Covishield).

If you compelted your original vaccination scheme with a vaccine not authorized by the EMA, you must isolate for 7 days on arrival in France and get a booster shot of an EMA authorised vaccine as soon as possible to be considered “fully vaccinated” in France and receive a Pass Sanitaire.

What the government currently says:

Booster shot/ 3rd vaccine dose

The booster shot is open to everyone aged 18 and over, 3 months after their last injection (Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, or AstraZeneca), or 4 weeks after their last injection (Johnson & Johnson), or 3 months after their last positive test.

“Pass Sanitaire”

  • People aged 65 and over and people vaccinated with Johnson & Johnson are eligible to receive a booster shot from 27 November 2021 and must have proof of a booster shot by 15 December 2021 in order to keep their pass sanitaire activated.
  • People aged 18 to 64, who had their 2nd vaccine injection before 17 June 2021 are eligible to receive their booster shot from 27 November 2021 and must have received it by 15 January 2022 in order to keep their pass sanitaire activated.
  • People aged 18 to 64, who received their 2nd vaccine injection after 17 June 2021, are eligible to receive their vaccine 3 months after the date of the 2nd injection, and must receive the boost shot within 7 months of the 2nd injection in order to keep their pass sanitaire activated.
  • After your booster shot, you will receive a new QR code which will become valid 7 days after the injection. This QR code will renew your Pass Sanitaire.
  • From 29 November 2021, PCR tests and lateral flow tests must be dated within the last 24 hours to be used as a valid Pass Sanitaire.
  • At this time, we do not know what will happen if your Pass Sanitaire is disactivated, or how to reactivate it.

 

What to do:

  • If you can receive a booster shot in your home country before you come to France, that may be the easiest path. Otherwise:
  • Check the date of your last injection and calculate the date from which you are eligible to receive your booster.
  • Book your vaccination appointment on Doctolib.fr or on the Doctolib app:
    • There is a step-by-step guide at the end of this post.
    • Don’t be discouraged if you are scrolling through pages saying they don’t have appointments available, there may be a slot on a later page.
    • Each day new appointments are added. If you don’t get one straight away, don’t panic.
  • At your appointment you will be given a new QR code. Scan this code on the TousAntiCovid app to update your Pass Sanitaire

 

Doctolib Guide:

  1. Go to fr or the Doctolib app
  2. Select “me faire vacciner”

  1. Add your location (you may have to travel to receive a vaccine on your desired date)

  1. Select “reserver une dose de rappel” = reserve a booster shot

  1. Select the vaccine you need

  1. Select the date you are eligible to have your booster (See section “Pass Sanitaire” in this document)

  1. Choose your appointment time and place

  1. You will be asked a series of questions to check your eligibility e.g. aged over 12, completed an original Covid Vaccination scheme, no current Covid symptoms etc. If you meet these requirements, click “J’ai lu et j’accepte les consignes”

  1. Now login or create an account to confirm the appointment

Image Sortir à Paris. Information from Service-Public.fr

How to Get a “Pass Sanitaire”

Since 9 August 2021, a pass sanitaire (health pass) is required in France to enter many public places. The French government has made this easier to obtain for foreigners coming to the country. Below are instructions on how you can get your pass either in advance or after you arrive.

Where the Health Pass is Required

A health pass is required to enter the University of Kent’s Paris study centre (based at Reid Hall). You will also be asked to show your health pass at the following places (non-exhaustive list):

  • Restaurants, cafes, bars, nightclubs
  • Retirement homes, hospitals and medical providers (except in case of emergency)
  • Long-distance transport (planes, trains, boats and buses)
  • Cultural events and sites (museums, monuments, cinemas, and theatres)
  • Sporting facilities (gyms and swimming pools)
  • Festivals, amusement parks, zoos
  • Most libraries

A health pass is NOT required for:

  • Grocery stores and other food shops
  • Small shops under 20,000 m2
  • Outdoor free access parks and gardens
  • Not required for religious services, but is required for cultural events held at churches
  • To visit an internist or family doctor

Obtaining your Health Pass

If you have been vaccinated in the EU, you will already have the QR code proving your vaccination record. This acts as your “health pass” and you will not need to apply via the instructions included here. You can simply show the code in electronic (on your phone) or paper form at the sites which require a health pass.

UK nationals who have been vaccinated in the UK under the normal vaccination scheme should request their digital “NHS Covid pass”, which is accepted in France in the same fashion as an EU Health Pass. This is available through the NHS app.

For non-EU citizens or non-vaccinated EU citizens. The French pass is issued to people who have proof of a negative covid test or those who have been fully vaccinated with a vaccine recognized by the European Medicines Agency or one of the equivalents to these vaccines.

Here are the current conditions of being fully vaccinated – though please see the note below as these will change:

  • 4 weeks after a one-dose injection (Johnson & Johnson)
  • 7 days after the second injection for two-dose vaccines (Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca)
  • 7 days after the injection if you have recovered from COVID-19 (only one dose is necessary)

As of 27 November, France is rolling out its booster vaccination scheme. The booster shot is open to everyone aged 18 and over, 5 months after their second injection (Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, or AstraZeneca), or 4 weeks after their single injection (Johnson & Johnson), or 5 months after their last positive test. The booster shot will become a requirement for the Health Pass in the next few months. Read more about it in our Booster Vaccination Guide.

You can get a Health Pass from a health professional in France, including pharmacies and vaccine centres (for free). Some pharmacies are now charging a 5-10 euro fee to create a health pass for foreigners. Find the government list and map of pharmacies providing this service here: https://www.sante.fr/recherche/trouver/health%20pass 

If you are currently abroad, you can also apply for one via a new online system in advance.  https://www.demarches-simplifiees.fr/commencer/passe-sanitaire-etudiants

We recommend applying for your Health Pass as soon as possible. Prepare the following documents, in electronic format (jpg/pdf):

  1. Your vaccination certificate, stating the type of vaccine used
  2. A scan/image of your passport
  3. Your travel ticket (return ticket)
  4. Your student visa 
  5. Your University of Kent status letter

Once you log in, please follow the prompts.

Image from Europe 1. Information sourced from www.diplomatie.gouv.fr

Our Guide to Paris Christmas Markets

December has finally arrived and Christmas celebrations are in full swing here in Paris.

You may have already seen the ferris wheel and other rides lighting up the Paris skyline from the Christmas market in the Jardin des Tuileries. But you may not know about the many other markets around the city this month.

Whether you are on the hunt for the perfect gift or simply wanting to soak up some of the Christmas cheer with a cup of vin chaud, there is a Paris Christmas market that has something you’re looking for.

There is likely to be one or two in your arrondissement to enjoy locally.

 

 

Here is our list of top picks:

 

Marché de Noël Notre Dame

Square René Viviani. Marché de Noël Notre Dame.

A classic French christmas market in Square René Viviani in the 5th arrondissement with regional foods like foie gras, macarons and warm chestnuts, local crafts, and artisan gifts.

The market will run from Friday 10th to Sunday 26th December.

 

Saint-Germain-des-Prés

Village de Noël Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Paris Info.

Grab a cup of vin chaud after class at the Village de Noël at Place Saint-Germain-de-Prés. This is the closest market to Reid Hall and is running from Monday 20 November to Sunday 26 December. The stalls range from souvenirs to soaps, truffles to Tibetan clothing.

 

Station F

Station F. Melinda Davan-Soulas. LCI.fr

Station F is the hub of start ups in Paris and this year they will be hosting their own Christmas market to showcase local small businesses. The market will feature local products crafts, food, beauty and fashion sold by the makers themselves on Saturday 11 and Sunday 12 December.

 

Le Hasard Ludique

Marché de Noël du Hasard Ludique. Paris Secret.

La Hasard Ludique is a creative space in an abandonned train station and rail track on Avenue de Saint-Ouen. This December, they are hosting 3 themed Christmas markets over the course of the month:

Honorable Mentions:

Marché de l’Hôtel de Ville

Marché de la Tour Eiffel

Cite fertile

La Recyclerie

Les Canaux

Kent alumnus and emeritus professor Abdulrazak Gurnah wins Nobel Prize For Literature 2021

The University is delighted to report that Emeritus Professor Abdulrazak Gurnah has won the Nobel Prize For Literature 2021.   

The Nobel Committee awarded this year’s Prize to Professor Gurnah for ‘his uncompromising and compassionate penetration of the effects of colonialism and the fate of the refugee in the gulf between cultures and continents.’  

The University’s Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Karen Cox was among the first to offer congratulations. She said: ‘On behalf of the entire University I’d like to extend our huge congratulations to Abdulrazak for this tremendous achievement. Abdulrazak is a complete inspiration to all of us – as a teacher, an alumnus of Kent and as such a powerful voice in postcolonial literature. His stories, some of which were first drafted in our very own Templeman Library, have touched millions worldwide and shine a light on human experiences that are so often ignored. We couldn’t be prouder of his success.’  

Dr Bashir Abu-Manneh, Head of the University’s School of English, added: ‘Abdulrazak Gurnah’s writing epitomises our contemporary condition of displacement, violence, and belonging. His is the struggle for individual voice, for justice, for feeling at home in an ever-changing world. No one writing today has articulated the pains of exile and the rewards of belonging so well. Canterbury and Kent are both his exile and home.’ 

Professor Abdulrazak Gurnah was born in 1948 in Zanzibar, Tanzania. He is the author of the highly acclaimed novels Memory of Departure, Pilgrims Way, Dottie, Paradise, which was shortlisted for the 1994 Booker Prize, Admiring Silence, By The Sea, Desertion, The Last Gift, and Gravel Heart. His latest book, Afterlives is published by Bloomsbury. Until his recent retirement, he was professor of English and postcolonial literatures at Kent’s School of English. Professor Gurnah was a member of the Man Booker Prize judging panel in 2016. 

Watch his Think Kent talk on Indian Ocean Journeys here and his reading of The Arriver’s Tale for Refugee Tales here. You can read more about Professor Gurnah’s life and work here.

Author Sophie Mackintosh

“Speculative Futures and Thinking” – an Event with Author Sophie Mackintosh

The University of Kent Paris School of Arts and Culture and the American University of Paris are pleased to welcome Sophie Mackintosh as our Paris Writer in Residence 2021. The Paris School of Arts and Culture will be welcoming students and guests for a presentation and Q&A with Sophie on Wednesday, 6 October from 7-8:30 pm.

Entitled “Speculative Futures and Thinking”, Sophie’s talk will explore what’s beyond what we know of as ‘speculative’, and how we can use that kind of imaginative zone as a way to think and develop our writing across all modes and genres.

Born in South Wales in 1988, Sophie is currently based in London. Her fiction, essays and poetry have been published by GrantaThe White ReviewThe New York Times and The Stinging Fly, among others. Her debut novel The Water Cure was published by Hamish Hamilton in the UK in Spring 2018 and by Doubleday in the US in early 2019, and was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize. Her second novel Blue Ticket was published in Summer 2020 to critical acclaim.

To attend this free event, please RSVP at this link by 5pm, Tuesday, 5 October. You must reserve your place for admittance.  A French “pass sanitaire” will be required upon entry.

Graduate Profile: Recent Alumna Hana Szobonyova

This latest edition of our Graduate Profile series focuses on a recent graduate of History and Philosophy of Art programme, Hana Szobonyova. Originally from the Czech Republic, Hana completed her MA degree at our Paris School of Arts and Culture in September 2021. In this interview Hana shares her experience during of her studies at our Paris School, which were enhanced by getting involved in our extracurricular activities as well as exciting internship opportunities and future prospectives gained thanks to her degree.

What is it like living and studying in Paris?

There is no better place to study history and philosophy of art than Paris. Although the past year was difficult and complicated with cultural venues being closed, Paris still remained an inspiring place to live. Since restrictions were lifted, there has not been a single week I haven’t go to a museum or a new exhibition. Now, more than ever, I can truly appreciate what this city can offer. Studying in Paris is a valuable experience especially for all those who are strongly interested in design and art.

What did you particularly enjoy about your studies?

The course’s structure perfectly fit my personal interests which are focused on art and history of the 19th and 20th century. Another great thing about the program was the possibility of auditing. Taking additional classes is a great way to expand one’s horizons and to learn more (for example about areas you know very little about). Although, with extra classes there is much more work and readings to do, nevertheless, the rewards are priceless.

How do you think postgraduate study differs from undergraduate study?

It is very different. For me maybe even more as my undergraduate program was mostly focused on business and practise rather than on theory and research. Also, postgraduate studies are very independent and they are also driven by your own personal interests. That is highly advantageous as you have the possibility to expand your knowledge in topics and areas you are truly interested in through your own research and independent studies.

How do you think your studies will affect your employment prospects?

As my education is quite diverse I hope to find a suitable place where I could use and combine all of my skills and knowledge. The last year spent in Paris has definitely impacted me in many ways; It expanded my interests and knowledge in art and philosophy, it also helped me to perceive and comprehend French culture and French history from a new perspective, and lastly, it changed and shaped my future career perspectives and aspirations.

Could you tell us about your internship experience?

During my studies at Kent I participated in the organising committee for the annual postgraduate festival as the art event curator. I was also part of The Menteur team where I helped to shape the visual identity of the magazine for the academic year 2022-2021 as the head of design. When the academic year ended I started my internship at The American Library in Paris as a Communications and Program intern where I stayed until the end of August. That was definitely a valuable experience as it enabled me to perceive the organisation’s structure internally, while working with the Program Manager on upcoming cultural events that the institute runs.

What are you planning to do next?

This week, I am starting my internship at UNESCO, where I will work as an intern for the Permanent Delegation of the Czech Republic. I am very excited to start my new position there as it will be very different from any other previous work experiences I’ve done so far.

Any advice for those thinking about taking this course?

I think it is good to think in advance about what you would like to study and where your interests are. If you want to study history and philosophy or art particularly focusing on the 19th and 20th century, then the Paris School of Arts and Culture might be very suitable.