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Paris-Panthéon-Assas University
French university in Paris
Panthéon-Assas University Paris (French: Université Paris-Panthéon-Assas,[1]IPA:[ynivɛʁsitepaʁipɑ̃teɔ̃asas]), commonly known as Assas or Paris 2 (French: Paris II, French pronunciation:[paʁidø]), is a university in Paris. It is considered the direct inheritor of the Faculty of Law of Paris,[2] the second-oldest faculty of Law in the world, founded in the 12th century.[3]
Following the 1970 split of the University of Paris, often referred to as the 'Sorbonne', in the aftermath of the May 68 events, law professors faced decisions regarding the future of their faculty. 88 out of 108 law professors elected to sustain the legacy of the Faculty of Law of Paris by establishing a new university dedicated to the study of law.[4] The university is housed within the same two buildings that previously accommodated the Faculty of Law of Paris.[2][5 • 1The canonical books on the history of economic thought rarely mention women’s writings at least before the twentieth century.1 As Michèle Pujol (1998) has noted, when women are quoted, it is mainly in the odd example or footnote.2 The invisibility of women’s contribution, qualified as the “malestream in economics” by Pujol, raises epistemological issues about what constitutes economics. Based on male social and professional experiences, economists have underestimated women’s economic contributions (Seiz, 2003). The erasure of women’s and feminist voices in the neoclassical paradigm has introduced major androcentric biases in the discipline (Pujol, 1995). Male economists have paid little attention to women, or they have adopted an anti-feminist gaze; as a result, feminist economic writings by both women and men analyzing gender inequalities have been often “forgotten”. Furthermore, ignoring the economic writings of women has led to misrep 1.Tristan’s Conception of a Worker’s Union