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Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University

Coordinates: 48°50′55″N 2°20′36″E / 48.84861°N 2.34333°E / 48.84861; 2.34333
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Panthéon-Sorbonne University
Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne


Other name
Paris 1
MottoOmnibus Sapientia, Unicuique Excellentia
TypePublic
Established1971, following the division of the University of Paris (founded: c. 1150)
Budget€222 million (2021)
ChancellorBernard Beignier (Chancellor of the universities of Paris)
PresidentChristine Neau-Leduc
Administrative staff
2,770
Students45,200
Location
Paris
,
France

48°50′55″N 2°20′36″E / 48.8486°N 2.3433°E / 48.8486; 2.3433
Colours  Blue,   white,   gold
AffiliationsChancellery of the Universities of Paris
Europaeum
Una Europa
Websitehttps://www.pantheonsorbonne.fr/
Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University is located in Paris
Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University
Location in Paris

Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University (French: Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne), also known as Paris 1 (or Paris I) and Panthéon-Sorbonne University (or, together with Sorbonne University and Sorbonne Nouvelle University, simply as the Sorbonne),[1] is a public research university in Paris, France.[2]

It was created in 1971 from two faculties of the historic University of Paris – colloquially referred to as the Sorbonne – after the May 1968 protests, which resulted in the division of one of the world's oldest universities. Most of the economics professors (35 out of 41) of the Faculty of Law and Economics of Paris decided to found the multidisciplinary Paris 1 University with professors of the faculty of humanities of Paris and a few professors of law.[3]

Panthéon-Sorbonne has three main areas of specialization:[4] Economics and Management, Human Sciences, and Legal and Political Sciences. It comprises several subjects such as: Economics, Law, Philosophy, Sociology, History, Geography, Cinema, Plastic arts, Art history, Political science, Development Studies, Mathematics and Management.[5]

Panthéon-Sorbonne is France's 2nd largest university in the Arts and Humanities and 19th in the world, ahead of King's College London and the University of Pennsylvania, but behind Sorbonne University.[6]

Panthéon-Sorbonne's headquarters is located on the Place du Panthéon in the Latin Quarter, an area in the 5th and the 6th arrondissements of Paris. The university also occupies part of the historical Sorbonne campus. The current name of the university refers to these two symbolic buildings: the Sorbonne and the Panthéon (Saint-Jacques part).[7] Overall, its campus includes over 25 buildings in Paris, such as the Centre Pierre Mendès France ("Tolbiac"), the Maison des Sciences Économiques, among others.[8]

History

[edit]
Helene Ahrweiler, one of the cofounders of Paris 1

The historic University of Paris (French: Université de Paris) first appeared in the second half of the 12th century, but was reorganised in 1970 as 13 autonomous universities after the student protests of the French May.

The split of the University of Paris

[edit]

In 1945, at the end of the World War II, the University of Paris was faced with its own problems, which had been exacerbated by the war and foreign occupation. Students were crammed into overcrowded classrooms and lecture theatres, and the teaching staff, who were too few in number, did not have the resources to monitor and supervise them properly.

The decentralisation of university campuses and centres in and around the capital was mainly the work of the Fifth French Republic in the early years of its existence. This policy achieved its objectives, in particular by responding to the problems posed by student numbers. The government also believed it could control student access to university, by organising a strict selection process at the entrance to faculties and creating university technical institutes (IUT) in the Paris suburbs. As this reform had not been negotiated with all the interested parties, it was rejected by students in an unfavourable political and social climate, and provoked a veritable insurrection in faculties in Paris and the other regions.[9]

During the French May and following months of conflict between students and authorities at the University of Paris at Nanterre, the administration shut down that university on 2 May 1968. Students of the University of Paris protested the closure and the threatened expulsion of several students at Nanterre on 3 May 1968.

In Paris, where the university had become very difficult to manage due to the sheer number of professors and students, the law of 12 November 1968 led to the creation in 1969 of thirteen universities to succeed the University of Paris (nicknamed "the Sorbonne"), which ceased to exist.

At the instigation of professors François Luchaire (public law), Henri Bartoli (economics) and Hélène Ahrweiler (humanities), the three official co-founders of the university, the Paris 1 "Panthéon-Sorbonne" University was created in 1971 from the merger of part of the Faculty of Law and Economics (Panthéon) and part of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities (Sorbonne).

While Paris-Sorbonne University (now Sorbonne University) and Sorbonne Nouvelle succeeded the Faculty of Arts and Humanities of the University of Paris,[10] Panthéon-Assas University the Faculty of Law,[11] and Pierre and Marie Curie University (now Sorbonne University) and Paris Descartes University (now Paris Cité University) the Faculty of Sciences, Panthéon-Sorbonne University was founded as an interdisciplinary university.

The majority of the law professors from the faculty of law and economics at the University of Paris desired to restructure their faculty into a university.[12] However, most of the faculty's economists and political scientists, whose disciplines were secondary in the Faculty of Law of Paris, wanted to join a multidisciplinary university[13] they hurried ahead of their colleagues and established Paris I and were joined by professors of the faculty of humanities and few professors of the faculty of law and economics.[14]

The name of the university show this interdisciplinarity: the Sorbonne building is the traditional seat of the Humanities studies in Paris (hence it is also used by Sorbonne Nouvelle and Sorbonne University), and the Panthéon Centre is, with the Assas Centre,[15] the traditional seat of the law studies (hence it is also used by Panthéon-Assas University).

Campuses

[edit]
Student distribution across the university's campuses
First two years locations (L1, L2) 3rd years and graduates locations (L3, M1, M2, PhD)
Port-Royal Centre

(13th arrondissement of Paris) It houses courses for 1st and 2nd year students of:

Panthéon Centre, Latin Quarter campus

(5th arrondissement of Paris) Centre shared with Panthéon-Assas University. It houses the University Head Office, the Presidency, the Sorbonne Artgallery and third-year undergraduate (L3) and master's-level courses of:

  • the Sorbonne Law School (and the Sorbonne's Economic, Social Administration Institute and Paris Insurance Institute)
Pierre Mendès-France Centre

(13th arrondissement of Paris) This centre is home to the majority of first (L1) and second-year undergraduates (L2). It is the obligatory step for many students before accessing third-year (L3) and masters courses. 1st and 2nd year students of:

  • the Sorbonne School of Management
  • the Sorbonne School of History
  • the Sorbonne School of Economics
  • the Sorbonne Department of Philosophy
  • the Sorbonne Department of Sociology
  • the Sorbonne Department of Geography
  • the Sorbonne School of Political Science
  • the Sorbonne School of Art History and Archaeology
  • the Sorbonne Mathematics and Computer Science Department
Sorbonne Centre, Latin Quarter campus

(5th arrondissement of Paris) Campus shared with Sorbonne University and the Chancellery. It houses the Sorbonne Library and courses. Reserved for third-year undergraduates (L3), masters and doctoral students (PhD) of:

  • the Sorbonne School of Management
  • the Sorbonne School of History
  • the Sorbonne Department of Philosophy
  • the Sorbonne School of Political Science
Institute of Geography Building, Latin Quarter campus

(5th arrondissement of Paris) Reserved for third-year undergraduates (L3), masters students of:

  • the Sorbonne Department of Geography
Michelet Centre

(6th arrondissement of Paris) Centre shared with Sorbonne University It houses the Michelet Library. Reserved for third-year undergraduates (L3), masters students of:

  • the Sorbonne School of Art History and Archaeology
Maison des Sciences Économiques

(13th arrondissement of Paris) It houses master's-level courses of:

  • the Sorbonne School of Economics
  • the Sorbonne Mathematics and Computer Science Department
Saint-Charles Centre

(15th arrondissement of Paris) It houses all undergraduates (L1 to L3), masters and doctoral students courses of:

  • the Sorbonne School of Arts
Broca Centre

(5th arrondissement of Paris) It houses all undergraduates (L1 to L3), masters and doctoral students courses of:

  • Sorbonne Institute of Judicial Studies
  • Sorbonne Institute for Research and Higher Studies in Tourism (IREST)

Latin Quarter campus

[edit]
The Sorbonne Library, administered by Paris I
Reading room of Sainte-Geneviève Library, co-administered with Sorbonne Nouvelle University
View of the Sorbonne, shared with Sorbonne University
View of Michelet Centre, Paris I's campus for Archeology, shared with Sorbonne University
View of l'Institut de Géographie, Paris I's campus for Geography
Pierre-Mendès-France Centre, called Paris I's "Tolbiac" campus.
View of the Sorbonne School of Arts, or the Saint-Charles Centre.

Panthéon Centre

[edit]

The Panthéon Centre, which should not be confused with the Panthéon itself, was the building of the Faculty of Law of the former University of Paris and is located opposite the Pantheon. It was designed by Jacques-Germain Soufflot in 1760 as part of a new architectural ensemble for the Montagne Sainte-Geneviève. The Faculty of Law building was completed in 1744.

At the end of the 19th century, when the Sorbonne was undergoing major reforms, an extension was planned for the Panthéon Centre, designed by Louis-Ernest Lheureux. The extension took place in two phases, 1876-1878 and 1891–1899, and gave rise to the construction of a large new building connected to the 18th century facade. Together, they now occupied the entire city block. The construction of the Cujas wing, an 8-storey building on rue Cujas designed by the architect Jacques Becmeur, comprising a car park, an amphitheater and 4 floors of offices, is connected to the historic buildings by a monumental staircase which was later decorated by the students of the Sorbonne Fine Arts Department (UFR d'Arts Plastiques). The main courtyard and the facades of the original building were listed as Historic Monuments in 1926.

The Panthéon Centre is home to the prestigious Sorbonne Law School and is shared with the Assas Law School of Paris-Panthéon-Assas University. The Panthéon Centre houses the head office of the university.

Sorbonne Centre

[edit]

The Sorbonne Centre houses multiple departments of Panthéon-Sorbonne University, including department of Management (École de Management de la Sorbonne),[16] History (École d’histoire de la Sorbonne),[17] Philosophy (UFR de Philosophie),[18] Political Science (UFR de Science Politique)[19] and part of the Economics and Law departments. It is one of the main campuses of the university. It is shared with Sorbonne University.

Institute of Geography

[edit]

The Institute of Geography was built between 1914 and 1926 by Henri-Paul Nénot. The institute was designed to bring together in a single building the collections, teaching and research in geography, hitherto divided between the faculties of arts and sciences. The building is connected to the neighboring Oceanographic Institute by a double arch to form the Curie campus.

The occupation of the Institute of Geography results from a decree of December 1, 1980, concerning joint ownership between the three universities Paris 1, Paris 4 (today Sorbonne University), Paris 7 (today Paris Cité University) and the Sorbonne Library. Today, the building houses students of Geography department from 3rd year of bachelor's degree.[20]

Other campuses in Paris

[edit]

Michelet Centre (Institute of Art and Archeology)

[edit]

The Institute of Art and Archeology was built on the site of the former Institute of Applied Chemistry of the Faculty of Sciences by the architect Paul Bigot (1870-1942). The building offers in particular to the gaze of walkers, at the base of the large arcades, a frieze formed of terracotta bas-reliefs reproducing famous works of world art (Parthenon, Ara Pacis Augustae, etc.). The syncretism desired by Paul Bigot gives the Institute of Art and Archeology an educational virtue that resonates with the function of the building. Inside, the entrance vestibule, the amphitheater and the large reading room of the library, which occupies the heart of the building, have retained their volumes, but, on the floors, the galleries which housed the collections The heritage structures constituted in the Sorbonne and Paul Bigot's plan of Rome were abolished in the 1970s in favor of a partitioning of spaces into classrooms and teachers' offices, following the massification of higher education.

Initially designed for 200 students and 3 professors, the building now houses, equally, the art history and archeology departments of the two universities of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and Sorbonne University (formerly Paris IV), several thousand students and nearly 150 tenured teacher-researchers.Property of the State, the Institute of Art and Archeology is assigned, by ministerial decree of June 30, 1983, in endowment to the two universities Paris 1 and Paris IV and registered in this form in the registers of the State. It has been classified as a Historic Monument since September 9, 1996.

Port-Royal Campus

[edit]

The brand new Port-Royal Campus is spread over two neighboring sites: the René-Cassin building located at 17 rue Saint-Hippolyte and, on the other side of the street, the former Lourcine barracks, which covers the entire block between boulevard de Port-Royal and rue de la Glacière, Broca and Saint-Hippolyte.

The René-Cassin site is made up of two buildings: a 19th-century building acquired by the Ministry of National Education in 1957 and restructured in 1987, but above all a new building built between 1987 and 1990 by the architects Jacques Ripault and Denise Duhart.

The former Lourcine barracks, located at 37 boulevard Port-Royal, is one of the oldest military sites in Paris. Matured since 2011, the project to create a new law campus was entrusted in 2014 to the Public Establishment for University Development of the Ile de France region (EPAURIF) with a contracting authority mandate. The architectural challenge of the project was to preserve this heritage, testimony of the urban history of this district by touching it as little as possible, while developing it in an optimal way.

In addition to the three buildings on the Lourcine block, the current René-Cassin center has been attached to the new site to give birth to the Port-Royal Campus from the start of the 2019 academic year. This new center of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne allows, between others, the grouping of sites dedicated to legal disciplines. It welcomes students, teachers, researchers and staff in exceptional working conditions. More than 2,400 people now occupy this new campus.

Pierre Mendès-France Centre

[edit]

In November 1970, Olivier Guichard, then Minister of National Education, decided to build a new university education center at the corner of rue de Tolbiac and rue de Baudricourt in the 13th arrondissement. In January 1971, the architects Michel Andraut and Pierre Parat were entrusted with the construction of the new building. The model of the project was presented by the architects on November 16, 1971. After two years of construction, the new university center opened its doors in the fall of 1973 under the name of "Multidisciplinary Center of Tolbiac".

Renamed in 1983 in honor of the French politician Pierre Mendès France, the Center Pierre-Mendès-France was built in the context of post-68 university programs and the urban renewal of the Italy XIII sector undertaken since 1964. The site – a cramped triangular plot of 7,500 m2 hitherto occupied by a deposit of cobblestones – led to the original and ambitious choice of vertical development, which is quite unusual in terms of university architecture. The architects imagined a high-rise building (IGH) composed of three towers of unequal heights built around a central reinforced concrete core: tower A is nine stories high, tower B sixteen, and tower C of twenty-two. Andrault and Parat worked on the building in a quest for functionality and formal expressiveness which involves deconstructing the volumes, vigorously linking the lift towers ensuring vertical circulation in the building, "urban modules" which are these “suspended” cubic volumes sheltering the offices and the classrooms, and the amphitheatres which unfold in a corolla at the base of the building. This sculptural work is extended by a brutalist aesthetic based on the association of rough concrete, smoked glass, bricks, pebbles or even by the moving "landscape" imagined within the framework of the 1% artistic by Bernard Alleaume and Yvette Vincent-Alleaume at the base of the building to enliven the spaces overlooking rue de Tolbiac.

The Pierre-Mendès-France Campus currently welcomes around 6,000 first and second year undergraduate students in human sciences, economics and management.

  • Tolbiac Center : a secondary building[citation needed] of the Mendès-France Center (which confusingly is also called Tolbiac).

List of other campuses in the Paris region

[edit]

There are other campuses of Paris 1 in the Parisian areas :

  • Condorcet Campus: a new inter-university campus shared with other universities, in Aubervilliers.
  • Albert Châtelet Campus: commonly called Calvin, it is a secondary building[citation needed] of the Sorbonne.
  • Rue d'Ulm Campus: like Calvin, a secondary building[citation needed] of the Sorbonne.
  • Institute of Philosophy of Sciences and Techniques (IHPST) : located in the Rue du Four.
  • Mahler Campus: located in the 4th arrondissement, it houses an historical and legal studies institute.
  • Saint-Charles Campus: located in the 15th arrondissement. Founded in 1973, it houses the Sorbonne School of Arts (arts and cinema).
  • Sorbonne Economic Sciences House: located in the 13th arrondissement. It houses the Sorbonne School of Economics.
  • Broca Campus: Located in the 5th arrondissement. It houses the Sorbonne School of Management.
  • International Building : located in the Boulevard Arago, commonly called Arago. It houses the International Relations Institute.
  • Fontenay Campus: located in the suburban town of Fontenay-aux-Roses, in the old buildings of the École Normale Supérieure. It houses the Sorbonne Institute of Social Sciences of Work:
    • Sceaux Campus: in the suburban town of Sceaux, it is a secondary building of the Fontenay Center.
    • Bourg-la-Reine Campus: located in Bourg-la-Reine, it is a secondary building of the Fontenay Center.
    • Nogent Campus: located in Nogent-sur-Marne, it is a secondary building of the Fontenay Center.

Organisation and administration

[edit]

Departments[21]

[edit]

Sorbonne School of History

[edit]

Teaching and research are spread over several sites in Paris: on the left bank, in the Latin Quarter (Sorbonne, Panthéon, Centre rue du Four) and in the Pierre Mendès France Centre (Tolbiac); on the right bank (Institut National d'Histoire de l'Art, Centre rue Malher, and the Condorcet Campus on the La Plaine, Aubervilliers site, and in 2024 on the La Chapelle, Paris site). The School has 17 specialized libraries, among the richest in the world in their scientific fields, for books and document collections and for access to digital holdings. The Sorbonne Library is an additional resource.

Sorbonne School of Arts

[edit]

The Sorbonne School of Arts (École des arts de la Sorbonne, EAS) is the Plastic Arts and Art Sciences Departement (UFR 04) of the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, teaches art through its most contemporary issues, through practice, but also the analysis of works and their mediation. The school offers a variety of courses ranging from Visual Arts, Cinema and Audiovisual, to Cinema/Management, as well as Aesthetics and Art Sciences, Design, Arts and Media, Arts and Culture and a Preparatory Course for the Teaching Profession (PPPE) specialized in Plastic Arts.

Located in the heart of the 15th arrondissement, at 47 rue des Bergers, in a building of more than 7000 square meters entirely dedicated to it - the Saint Charles Centre - the EAS welcomes nearly 3000 students. It has a university library specifically dedicated to art and creation, an amphitheater, a contemporary art gallery, classrooms for theoretical courses, workshops for artistic practices (sculpture, painting, ceramics, silk-screen printing, engraving, a silver and digital photography laboratory, a Fab Lab... ), an office for the loan of audiovisual material, computer rooms, editing rooms, etc. .[22]

Sorbonne Law School

[edit]

Panthéon-Sorbonne united in 2009 all legal studies in the university and gave that new department the name of École de droit de la Sorbonne ("Sorbonne Law School").

The Panthéon-Sorbonne University School of Law holds since 1993 with Cornell University, the "Cornell Law School-Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne Summer Institute of Comparative and International Law".[23]

Since March 7, 2022, Chantal Arens, First President of the Court of Cassation signed a partnership agreement between the Court of Cassation and the Panthéon-Sorbonne University. This partnership will result in the organization of colloquiums, the development of research projects involving judges of the Court of Cassation and will allow the hosting of student interns within the Court.[24]

Sorbonne School of Economics

[edit]

The Sorbonne School of Economics (EES, formerly UFR02 - Economics) was created in 1971.

Other

[edit]
  • Sorbonne School of Management
  • Sorbonne Department of Geography
  • Sorbonne Department of Philosophy
  • Sorbonne School of Political Science
  • Sorbonne Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science

Institutes

[edit]

Sorbonne Publishing

[edit]

Sorbonne Publishing (Editions de la Sorbonne) is a publishing house of the Panthéon-Sorbonne University.[25]

It has published over 700 books since 1971 and publishes approximately 50 new titles a year.[26]

Academics

[edit]

Undergraduate admission

[edit]

Panthéon-Sorbonne receives the most applications, with more than 113,000 applicants for only 6,164 places.[27] More than 22.84% of students accepted by the university having received highest honors ("mention très bien") in high school during the 2019 session (first of France).[28]

In Law, in 2021, the rate of "with honors" and "with highest honors" mentions among the admitted students reached a high of 91% (second of France, after Panthéon-Assas).[29]

Teaching and learning

[edit]

Research

[edit]

Every year around 400 PhD theses are defended and 1,700 pre-PhD post-graduate degrees are awarded in 74 subjects divided between 15 graduate schools.

Documentary resource centers

[edit]

In Economics, the library at the Centre Pierre Mendès France offers students free access to its large collection.

In Law, the Cujas Library, co-administered with Panthéon-Assas, with its computerized documentation service, provides access to over 500 data banks and is the largest law and economics library in France.

In Humanities, The Sorbonne Library, a common library of Panthéon-Sorbonne University, Sorbonne-Nouvelle University, Sorbonne University, and Paris Cité University. It is administered by Panthéon-Sorbonne University as per a governing agreement signed among these universities in 2000.[30] It has a collection of almost three million books, 100,000 of which are more than 200 years old, and 17,500 periodicals covering all the humanities. The library and map collection of the Geography Institute are the oldest such collection in France. In addition, the 400,000 volumes in the specialist libraries offer users one of the largest collections in France and Europe.

International

[edit]

Panthéon-Sorbonne has signed over 150 conventions with foreign universities across five continents. These exchanges revolve around international networks such as Europaeum which bring together Oxford, London, Bologna, Bonn, Geneva, Helsinki, Leiden and Prague. The University of Paris I also heads a number of consortia which bring together French universities and professional organisations. The consortia are responsible for major international projects in Bucharest, Buenos Aires, Cairo, Istanbul (Galatasaray), and Moscow.

Every year some 130 academics from foreign universities come to teach and do research at the University of Paris I. Many researchers and members of faculty take part in major international research programs abroad; the university also hosts many annual international conferences. Six thousand international students, mainly from Europe, come to study as part of the SOCRATES or TEMPUS programmes. African students are joined by increasing numbers from Asia and America, and take part in specific programs organised in conjunction with universities across the world.

Dual and double degree programs

[edit]

At Panthéon-Sorbonne, students can apply for admission to one of the dual degree or double degree programs designed in conjunction with partner universities in France and abroad. Double degree programs confer two degrees to students, whereas dual degrees confer a degree from the host university only.

Rankings

[edit]

International rankings

[edit]
University rankings
Global – Overall
QS World[31]=328 (2024)
THE World[32]801–1000 (2024)

In 2021, Panthéon-Sorbonne was globally ranked 287th (9th of France) by QS World University Rankings[33] and 601-800th (32nd of France) by The Times Higher Education.[34] It does not currently appear in the latest US News ranking of world universities.[35] Regarding world reputation, it was ranked 101-125th in The Times Higher Education World Reputation Rankings of 2021.[36]

By area or subject, it was ranked:

  • In the 2021 QS World University Rankings[37]
    • Arts and Humanities: 31st (1st in France)
      • Classics & Ancient History: 12th (2nd in France)
      • Archaeology: 25th (1st in France)
      • Philosophy: 27th (2nd in France)
      • History: 33rd (1st in France)
      • Geography: 35th (1st in France)
      • Modern Languages: 67th ( 3rd in France)
      • Art & Design: 101st-150th (4th in France)
      • Architecture & Built Environment: 151st-200th (1st in France)
    • Social Sciences: 62nd (4th in France)
      • Law: 20th (1st in France)
      • Development Studies: 37th (1st in France)
      • Economics & Econometrics: 80h (3rd in France)
      • Politics & International Studies: 51st-100th (2nd in France)
      • Anthropology: 51st-100th (1st in France, tied)
      • Social Policy & Administration: 101st-120th (2nd in France)
      • Accounting & Finance: 101st-150th (5th in France, tied)
      • Business & Management studies: 101st-150th (7th in France, tied)
  • In the 2022 Times Higher Education:[38]
    • Arts and Humanities: 47th (2nd in France)
    • Law: 48th (1st in France)
    • Social Sciences: 251-300 (6th in France)
    • Business and Economics: 251-300 (6th in France)

National rankings

[edit]

Economics and business

In Economics, its undergraduate program is ranked second of the French universities by Eduniversal.[39] Its masters programs are ranked 4th of the French Universities or academic institution by Eduniversal.[40]

In Business, Panthéon-Sorbonne is ranked 14 by Eduniversal, second of the universities, behind Paris Dauphine University.[41]

Law

Panthéon-Sorbonne law programs are globally ranked second by Eduniversal.

Panthéon-Sorbonne undergraduate law program are ranked as follow:[42]

  • Law: 2nd
  • Law and Economics: 2nd
  • Law and English: 2nd

Graduate programs are ranked as follow:[43]

  • Social Law: 2nd and 3rd
  • Digital Law : 3rd
  • Tax law: 5th

In terms of salary, Panthéon-Sorbonne law graduates are ranked second in France.[44]

Humanities

No national ranking exists in Humanities.

Controversies

[edit]

Tolbiac blockades

[edit]

The Tolbiac center of Paris 1, which previously hosted the undergraduate lectures in law, is regularly subject to blockades, which cause cancellation of all lectures up to several months, including in 1995, 1997, 2006, 2007–09, 2010 and 2018.

Attempts of automatic pass for students

[edit]

Student unions regularly demand that the university grant student an automatic pass, in particular at each blockade or strike.[45] In 2020, during the covid crisis, the committee at Paris I in charge of exams decided to grant that right (i.e. to cancel marks under 10), but some professors asked the courts to cancel this decision[46] A first court validated the decision of the committee,[47] but a second one cancelled its decision.[48]

People

[edit]

This list includes notable people affiliated with the Panthéon-Sorbonne University. For people affiliated with the University of Paris which ceased to exist in 1970, see List of University of Paris people.

Notable academics

[edit]

Notable alumni

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Université Panthéon-Sorbonne official website". Départements de l'Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne.
  2. ^ "Université Paris | Panthéon-Sorbonne". archive.europaeum.org. Archived from the original on 14 July 2017.
  3. ^ "Les programmes de I à VII" (in French). 24 June 1970. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
  4. ^ "Université Panthéon-Sorbonne official website" (PDF). L'Université en chiffres.
  5. ^ "Pourquoi choisir l'université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne ?". formations.pantheonsorbonne.fr. 7 July 2020.
  6. ^ "QS World University Rankings for Arts and Humanities 2024". Top Universities. 4 November 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  7. ^ "Histoire de l'université | Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne". www.pantheonsorbonne.fr.
  8. ^ "Le Campus". Université Panthéon Sorbonne official website.
  9. ^ d'universitaires, Un collectif. "IUT, chronique d'une destruction annoncée". Libération (in French). Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  10. ^ Herpin, Fanny. "Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3 - Les origines de la Sorbonne Nouvelle". www.univ-paris3.fr.
  11. ^ Conac, pp. 177-178
  12. ^ Conac, pp. 177–178.
  13. ^ Conac, p. 178.
  14. ^ "Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne: L'Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne aujourd'hui". www.pantheonsorbonne.fr.
  15. ^ Conac, p. 191.
  16. ^ "Accueil | UFR - Management (UFR06)". management.pantheonsorbonne.fr. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  17. ^ "Equipe administrative | UFR - Histoire". histoire.pantheonsorbonne.fr. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  18. ^ "Présentation | Département de Philosophie". philosophie.pantheonsorbonne.fr. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  19. ^ "Administration | UFR11 - Science Politique". sciencepolitique.pantheonsorbonne.fr. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
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Sources

[edit]
  • Conac, Gérard (2005). "La fondation de l'université Paris I : François Luchaire, pilote d'une transition institutionnelle". In Bougrab, Jeannette; Maus, Didier (eds.). François Luchaire, un républicain au service de la République (in French). Publications de la Sorbonne. ISBN 978-2859445157.
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48°50′55″N 2°20′36″E / 48.84861°N 2.34333°E / 48.84861; 2.34333