University of Panthéon-Assas
University of Panthéon-Assas | |
---|---|
founding | 1970 (originally 1200) |
Sponsorship | state |
place | Paris , France |
president | Guilaume Leyte |
Students | 19,086, including 14,847 law students (2019) |
Employee | 2,412 |
Annual budget | 90.9 million euros |
Website | www.u-paris2.fr |
The University of Panthéon-Assas ( French Université Panthéon-Assas [ ynivɛʁsite pɑ̃teɔ̃asas ], short: Assas [ asas ], Paris II [ paʁi dø ] or Sorbonne-Assas ) is a public university in Paris . It is the successor to the law faculty of the University of Paris , the Sorbonne, which was split up in 1970 . Its law faculty is considered to be the most prestigious in France.
In addition to law, the range of courses also includes economics, administration and social sciences.
Since its foundation, the university has produced numerous presidents, prime ministers and other important personalities from politics, business and science.
Most of the university's 19 locations are in the Latin Quarter . One location is in Melun . The namesake of the university is the main building in the Rue d'Assas, west of the Jardin du Luxembourg and the Panthéon , the in the late 18th century in the immediate vicinity of Jacques-Germain Soufflot designed building of the former Law Faculty of the University of Paris is . The university management is housed there today. The University of Panthéon-Assas shares the building with the University of Panthéon-Sorbonne, which was also built in 1970 . In the course of the split up of the University of Paris, some legal scholars decided to become part of this new interdisciplinary university, while 88 of the 108 legal scholars established the University of Panthéon-Assas as a primarily legal university.
Personalities
Notable graduates
- Panagiotis Pikrammenos (* 1945), former Greek Prime Minister
- Michèle Alliot-Marie (* 1946)
- Prokopis Pavlopoulos (* 1950), President of the Hellenic Republic
- Joaquim Barbosa (* 1954), President of the Brazilian Supreme Court
- François Hollande (* 1954), President of the French Republic from 2012 to 2017
- François Baroin (* 1965)
- Claire Chazal (* 1956)
- Emmanuel Coulon (* 1968), French lawyer and Chancellor of the General Court of the European Union
- Rachida Dati (* 1965), former French Minister of Justice
- Patrick Devedjian (1944-2020)
- Bruno Gollnisch (* 1950)
- Pierre Habumuremyi (* 1961)
- Giorgos Kaminis (* 1954)
- Chékou Koré Lawel (* 1957), Nigerien general
- Sébastien Lecornu (* 1986), French minister
- Jean-Marie Le Pen (born 1928)
- Marine Le Pen (* 1968), party leader of the Front National
- Victorin Lurel (* 1951)
- Alain Madelin (* 1946), former French finance minister
- Jean-Pierre Raffarin (* 1948), former French Prime Minister
- Manuela Ramin-Osmundsen (* 1963)
- Catherine Samba-Panza (* 1954), Interim President of the Central African Republic
- Salou Souleymane (* 1953), Nigerien general
- Christiane Taubira (* 1952), French Minister of Justice
- Evangelos Venizelos (* 1957)
- Dominique de Villepin (* 1953), former French Prime Minister
- Eric Woerth (* 1956)
Eminent professors
- Jean Carbonnier (1908-2003)
- Jean Gaudemet (1908-2001)
- Georges Vedel (1910-2002)
- Guillaume Cardascia (1914-2006)
- Prosper Weil (1926-2018)
- Michel Ameller (* 1926)
- Claude Jorda (* 1938)
- Edmond Alphandéry (* 1943)
- Pierre Tercier (* 1943)
- Jean-Claude Martinez (* 1945)
- Pierre-Marie Dupuy (* 1946)
- Rainer Schröder (1947-2016)
- Ronny Abraham (* 1951)
- Anne Debet (* 1970)
- Peter Wirtz (* 1971)
Web links
- Official website (French / English)
Individual evidence
- ^ D'Agostino, Salvatore (1988). Università e Territorio: Squilibri e strategie di superamento . Guide Editori. P. 71.
- ↑ Nadeau, Jean-Benoît; Barlow, Julie (2005). Pas si fous, ces Français! Seuil. P. 180.
- ↑ Les programs de I à VII . June 24, 1970 ( lemonde.fr [accessed February 9, 2019]).
Coordinates: 48 ° 50 ′ 49 ″ N , 2 ° 20 ′ 41 ″ E