MIRKINE-GUETZÉVITCH (Boris) – THE FRENCH REPUBLIC (December 1943 - December 1946) Texts compiled and presented by Jean-Éric CALLON Collection of the Jean Monnet Faculty
MIRKINE-GUETZÉVITCH (Boris) – THE FRENCH REPUBLIC (December 1943 - December 1946) Texts compiled and presented by Jean-Éric CALLON Collection of the Jean Monnet Faculty
MIRKINE-GUETZÉVITCH (Boris) – THE FRENCH REPUBLIC (December 1943 - December 1946) Texts compiled and presented by Jean-Éric CALLON Collection of the Jean Monnet Faculty
MIRKINE-GUETZÉVITCH (Boris) – THE FRENCH REPUBLIC (December 1943 - December 1946) Texts compiled and presented by Jean-Éric CALLON Collection of the Jean Monnet Faculty
MIRKINE-GUETZÉVITCH (Boris) – THE FRENCH REPUBLIC (December 1943 - December 1946) Texts compiled and presented by Jean-Éric CALLON Collection of the Jean Monnet Faculty
    MIRKINE-GUETZÉVITCH (Boris)
    THE FRENCH REPUBLIC (December 1943 - December 1946) Texts compiled and presented by Jean-Éric CALLON Collection of the Jean Monnet Faculty
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    2019
    16 x 24 cm., paperback, printed in France with the "Imprim'vert®" label, 274 p.
    Boris Mirkine-Guetzévitch, a Russian professor of law, escaped the pogroms and the 1917 revolution by taking refuge in France. He evaded the Gestapo by reaching the United States in the summer of 1940. It was in New York that he played a key role in founding, with other exiled French intellectuals, a journal "intended to maintain the inextinguishable flame of French civilization": La République Française (The French Republic). Between December 1943 and December 1946, he published monthly articles on the constitutional and political situation in France. These articles, now extremely difficult to access, have been collected and presented for the first time by Jean-Éric Callon. This publication represents a major contribution from the author of the theory of rationalized parliamentarism to the understanding of postwar constitutional projects. It also provides a unique testimony to the ferment of constitutional thought within the Resistance between Algiers, London, New York, and Paris. Thus, from analyses of the legitimacy of provisional governments to reflections on the articulation of constitutional law and international law for the protection of human rights, Boris Mirkine-Guetzévitch offers us a captivating reading of the constitutional situation in France, tinged with the existentialism that increasingly marked this man who was very close to Jacques Maritain, both personally and intellectually.

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