Born on July 10, 1975, Florence Delogne obtained her law degree in June 1998 with great distinction from the Catholic University of Leuven.
Born on July 10, 1975, Florence Delogne obtained her law degree in June 1998 with great distinction from the Catholic University of Louvain. She completed an additional year of studies at Utrecht University (Faculteit Rechtsgeleerdheid) in European law (1998-1999).
She obtained a special degree in social law from the VUB (GGS Sociaal recht) in 2002, as well as a certificate in actuarial techniques, with a focus on the financing of pension schemes, from the Catholic University of Leuven in 2004.
She also graduated in 2007 from the K.U.Leuven (Leergangpensioenrecht) and in 2013 from the Solvay Brussels School (Special Master in Tax Management).
Her professional career has enabled her to develop significant expertise in the pensions field, particularly in supplementary pensions.(see CV on LinkedIn)
Her positions as Advisor and Deputy Cabinet Director to the various Ministers of Pensions between 2011 and 2020 have led her to initiate and define several major pension reforms, giving her in-depth knowledge of the relevant regulatory texts.
In addition to her activities as a lawyer, Florence Delogne is currently a lecturer at FUCaM in Mons (university certificate in insurance) and at UCL in Louvain-la-Neuve (university certificate in pension law and financing). She is also a lecturer at ULB's Faculty of Law and Criminology, where she teaches pension taxation as part of the Master of Specialization in Tax Law.
On February 25, 2020, the VUB Board of Directors awarded her the title of "Law and Criminology VUB Fellow", for a period of 3 academic years starting in June 2020.
Since October 1, 2020, she has been an expert member of the Commission for Supplementary Pensions.
She is a regular speaker at conferences and has published numerous articles in specialized journals and books.
She is a member of the management committee and a director of Celest Pension Fund OFP, an institution for occupational retirement provision (IORP) created on the initiative of bar associations and bailiffs.