- Part one: les Amphis du Droit
The project will aim to consider the following questions: Why is French law ‘traditionally’ so ill-suited to opening up to other subjects? Read more
- Part two: les Amphis de l’Europe
The ‘Amphis de l’Europe’ project seeks to open up debate on the issue of Europe from a global perspective, without reducing it to just the European Union. Read more
- Part three: les Amphis des libertés
‘European integration, i.e. the union of the free peoples of the continent’, according to Jean Monnet’s definition in his Mémoires (Paris, Fayard, 1976, p. 521), began with no reference to the fundamental rights or support for them. This failure to mention the fundamental rights demonstrates that they were not considered essential for the union of the peoples of Europe. Although they have gradually become key elements of the creation of the current European Union to the extent of forming part, through human rights, of the shared values enshrined in Articles 2 and 6 of the Treaty on European Union, they have also proved to be a source of division among Member States. Read more