par Alexandre Guigue | Juin 26, 2026 | FYPL – Issue2
Abstract: Unlike the United States, France has never experienced a government shutdown, even when its Parliament has proved unable to pass a budget on time. This article explains why, arguing that budgetary continuity in France rests on a constitutional and legal...
par John C. Reitz | Juin 26, 2026 | FYPL – Issue2
The New York Times, summarizing the major Supreme Court opinions of 2024, many of which were issued in June of 2024, in the closing days of the Supreme Court’s last term, opined that ‘[n]o Supreme Court term in recent memory has featured so many cases with potential...
par Sofía María Fölsch Schroh, David Gölz, Nikolaus Marsch | Juin 26, 2026 | FYPL – Issue2
Last year’s report (2023) on German public law by Philippe Cossalter and Maria Kordeva already emphasised the special importance of the right to a judicial remedy enshrined in Article 19(4) Basic Law, which also plays a role in German administrative law.1 Compared to...
par Alessia Monica | Juin 26, 2026 | FYPL – Issue2
This chronicle provides an overview of the main developments in EU administrative law, highlighting the increasingly close administrative cooperation between Member States and EU authorities. This cooperation has accelerated in the context of the EU integration...
par Philippe Cossalter | Juin 26, 2026 | FYPL – Issue2, Uncategorized
Abstract : This article examines the State’s role in administering truth within both the legal and digital spheres. Drawing on historical and philosophical reflection, it traces the distinction between reality and truth, the latter as a legal construct ascertained...
par Pier Marco Rosa Salva | Juin 26, 2026 | FYPL – Issue2
Abstract: This article examines the public administration of data in the Italian legal order, where the data has become a structural element of administrative action rather than a mere by-product of the digitalisation of documents. It first reconstructs the European...
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