Pantheon-Assas Paris II University (Université Paris II - Panthéon-Assas), also known as Assas, is a public research university in Paris, France.
The 1968 cultural revolution, commonly known as the French May, resulted in the division of the world's second oldest academic institution, the University of Paris, into thirteen autonomous universities. Pantheon-Assas University is the inheritor of the former law and economics faculties of the University of Paris. Pantheon-Assas University has been ranked the first law school in France by the 201
0 La Tribune French University Report,[1] the 2009 Le Nouvel Observateur French University Rankings[2] and the 2009 Le Figaro Legalease.[3] It is a founding member of Sorbonne Universités, an alliance with two other prestigious French universities specializing respectively in the humanities and medicine, Paris-Sorbonne University and Pierre and Marie Curie University. Pantheon-Assas has eighteen campuses in Paris, with the majority of them located in the historic Latin Quarter and its main campus situated in the Place du Panthéon, twenty four research centers and five doctoral schools. Pantheon-Assas is composed of four departments specializing in law, public and private management, economics and political science. The University enrolls 8,000 undergraduate and 9,000 postgraduate students with 2,500 foreign exchange students on visit every year. Since its founding in 1970, Pantheon-Assas has produced 2 French Prime Ministers, 3 presidents of French political parties, 8 French heads of various ministries including Defense, Justice, Interior and Economy and Finance, 2 foreign heads of state and 4 foreign senators and ministers. Its faculty has included Georges Vedel, of the Académie française, former member of the Constitutional Council of France, François Terré, member of the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques, Prosper Weil, member of the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques, Albert Rigaudière, member of the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques and Joe Verhoeven, secretary general of the Institut de droit international.
22/04/2019
Que cela serve d'exemple pour mettre fin à ce genre de pratiques malheureusement trop courantes..
Machine learning won’t kill lawyers, but blockchain will
I fear for the professions. Those which have enjoyed a monopoly for so long due to their protection by Royal Societies and Official registries. Those which require accreditation and continued professional development. I’m not saying they never provided a quality professional service, I’m saying ...
14/12/2017
Lawyer-bots are shaking up jobs
AI is augmenting and automating the tasks currently performed by hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. alone.
07/11/2017
AI fought the law, and won
An artificial intelligence lawyer, CaseCruncher Alpha, just beat 100 lawyers in a challenge. The robot and 100 law students from Cambridge were put up against each other and given “the basic facts of hundreds of PPI (payment protection insurance) mis-selling cases and asked to predict whether the Fi...