BIGOT (Grégoire) – THIS LAW THAT IS CALLED ADMINISTRATIVE… Studies in the History of Public Law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
BIGOT (Grégoire) – THIS LAW THAT IS CALLED ADMINISTRATIVE… Studies in the History of Public Law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
BIGOT (Grégoire) – THIS LAW THAT IS CALLED ADMINISTRATIVE… Studies in the History of Public Law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
BIGOT (Grégoire) – THIS LAW THAT IS CALLED ADMINISTRATIVE… Studies in the History of Public Law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
BIGOT (Grégoire) – THIS LAW THAT IS CALLED ADMINISTRATIVE… Studies in the History of Public Law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
BIGOT (Grégoire) – THIS LAW THAT IS CALLED ADMINISTRATIVE… Studies in the History of Public Law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
BIGOT (Grégoire) – THIS LAW THAT IS CALLED ADMINISTRATIVE… Studies in the History of Public Law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
    BIGOT (Grégoire)
    This so-called administrative law… Studies in the history of public law – 2nd revised and expanded edition –
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    2020
    13.5 x 24 cm., paperback, "Imprim'vert®" label, wrapped in transparent film, LXIII-366 p.
    Administrative law could only emerge around 1900 as an autonomous academic discipline by suppressing its history. Writing this history means questioning the nature of this so-called administrative law. It is political insofar as it recounts the confrontation between the individual, armed with the subjective rights recognized by the Declarations, and the State. It highlights the tragedy of the French Revolution, which, through distrust of justice as a power, failed to establish judges as impartial guarantors of these rights. The Napoleonic model, which plunged France into the neglect of rights as the foundation of politics for over a century, created administrative justice in the interest of a regulated power, that of a State that stands above rights. Administrative law is thus a science of the State, upon which it bases its aims and its legitimacy. In this new edition, the preface (70 pages) has been entirely rewritten. The author summarizes twenty years of research, particularly concerning this "thing that is supposedly the State." It also includes three new chapters on the fundamentally political dimension of public law. In this publication, Grégoire Bigot defends his conception of research: "To search is to seek to shift the lines of force. Humbly. Often making mistakes. To take nothing we are taught as true. Law as a subject of wonder."

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