L1 - Droit Constitutionnel
That night, Léo didn’t open his textbook. He sat on the floor of his tiny studio apartment, surrounded by carburetor parts and case law. He realized Claire was right. He had been looking for solid bolts in a system made of rubber bands and trust. He decided to stop memorizing and start understanding.
Claire wrote in the margin: “You turned the text into a living thing. That is the essence of constitutionalism. You passed. But more importantly, you understood.” droit constitutionnel l1
Léo’s highlighter ran dry. His copy of the Constitution, a thin, sad pamphlet, felt like a map to a country whose language he didn’t speak. He was drowning in a sea of terms: souveraineté nationale , bloc de constitutionnalité , question prioritaire de constitutionnalité . That night, Léo didn’t open his textbook
The breaking point came during the TD (tutorial). A stern third-year doctoral student, Claire, posed a question: “Under the 1958 Constitution, does the President of the Republic have a domaine réservé ?” He had been looking for solid bolts in