University of Paris II: Panthéon-Assas

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University of Paris II

Paris II Logo
Panthéon-Assas
'

Established 1970
School type Public (state run)
President Louis Vogel
Location Paris
Campus City
Homepage www.u-paris2.fr

The University of Paris II: Panthéon-Assas, also known as "Paris deux" or "Assas" after the rue d'Assas where it is headquartered, is an elite French university which is most famous for its degrees in law and business but also teaches administration, social and political science. It was founded as the continuation of the Faculty of Law and Economics of the University of Paris.

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[edit] About Assas

Assas likes to think of itself as the country's premier law school.

All of France's universities are as mainstream as possible, the only thing necessary to enter being a high school diploma and the marginal admission fee. Assas, as other Parisian universities, however, is elitist. Even though the university is required by law to admit anyone who meets the aforementioned conditions, strain is put on the students from the start and the first year drop-out rate consistently hovers in the 60-70% region;[1] the failure rate for subsequent years is also high. Thus, graduate degrees from Assas hold a very high reputation. While most of France's universities lean culturally and politically to the left, Assas assumedly leans to the right.

[edit] Campus

As most universities in Paris, Assas takes its formal name Paris II (Panthéon-Assas) from the places where it is located.

The administration offices and postgraduate studies are located in a building which is in the plaza that rings the Parisian landmark of the Panthéon. The Panthéon is in the latin quarter of Paris where its most prestigious schools are located: it is only a few blocks away from e.g. the Sorbonne, the Collège de France and X's former campus. Paris II (Panthéon-Assas) shares this spot with Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne) and they both administer the Cujas Law and Economics Library, which is the largest of its kind in France.

The relatively small but recently refitted Vaugirard campus, in the rue de Vaugirard, is the campus where the freshman studies take place.

The school's main campus is a huge, at least for Paris, 70's architecture building in the rue d'Assas. Its gigantic entrance hall leads to the main amphitheater, which can seat 1,700, where concerts are sometimes held. The building also has over a dozen other amphitheaters of all sizes, countless classrooms and labs, etc. This is also where the student associations are located. Paradoxically the student library at the Assas campus is relatively smaller than the ones at Vaugirard or the Panthéon.

There is another campus located in Melun in the south east of Paris.

[edit] Students and alumni

Most students of Assas come from upper class and upper-middle class families.

There is a large minority of foreign exchange students, as in most Parisian universities. Conversely, Assas encourages its students to spend at least a semester in a foreign university, especially other universities in the European Union, through the Socrates and Erasmus student exchange programmes. It also has a few highly selective graduate programs with Ivy League schools and other reputed universities in the United States of America and in Canada; as well as the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge and University College London in the UK; there are similar programs for universities all over the world.

The school's alumni include François Mitterrand, former President of the French Republic, Jean-Pierre Raffarin, France's previous UMP Prime Minister, Dominique de Villepin, France's current UMP Prime Minister, Jean-Marie Le Pen, president of the Front National party, and Alain Madelin, ex-President of Démocratie Libérale (now merged within the UMP). Most famous figures in the French legal world are Assas alumni.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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