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Boris Pasquier

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Boris Pasquier
NameBoris Pasquier
Birth date1976
Birth placeLyon, France
OccupationLegal scholar; jurist; public servant
NationalityFrench
Alma materUniversity of Lyon; Sciences Po; École nationale d'administration

Boris Pasquier.

Boris Pasquier is a French jurist, legal scholar, and public servant known for his contributions to administrative law, constitutional scholarship, and public policy reform in France and the European Union. Trained at leading French institutions, he has held positions in national ministries, international organizations, and academic posts, producing influential writings and participating in high‑profile commissions and tribunals. His career bridges scholarly analysis and practical institutional reform, engaging with courts, ministries, and intergovernmental bodies.

Early life and education

Pasquier was born in Lyon and educated in the French republican system, attending the University of Lyon, Sciences Po, and the École nationale d'administration. During his formative years he studied under professors connected with the Conseil d'État, the Cour de cassation, and the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. His legal formation included internships and attachments to offices within the Ministry of Justice (France), the Ministry of the Interior (France), and the European Commission, exposing him to administrative adjudication, European Court of Justice procedures, and comparative public law. He completed postgraduate research linking doctrines from the Conseil constitutionnel tradition to practices at the European Court of Human Rights and the Council of Europe.

Professional career

Pasquier began his professional career as an auditor and then maître des requêtes at the Conseil d'État, where he worked on matters intersecting the Constitution of France, regulatory policy, and public procurement disputes. He served in ministries including the Ministry of Economy and Finance (France) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (France), advising on regulatory reform, international agreements, and compliance with instruments from the European Union and the World Trade Organization. Later he held senior advisory roles in the Prime Minister's office (France) and participated in interministerial committees with members from the Assemblée nationale and the Sénat (France). Internationally, he represented France in working groups at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and contributed to drafting at sessions of the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie.

Parallel to his public service, Pasquier held academic appointments at the Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, the Université de Lyon, and as a visiting fellow at the European University Institute. He lectured on administrative litigation, constitutional review, and comparative law, supervising doctoral candidates whose topics ranged across the European Court of Human Rights, the German Federal Constitutional Court, and the Italian Constitutional Court. He has also acted as counsel and arbitrator in proceedings before administrative tribunals, arbitration panels involving the International Chamber of Commerce, and ad hoc commissions established under bilateral investment treaties.

Major works and contributions

Pasquier authored monographs and articles examining the relationship between constitutional review and administrative adjudication, engaging with debates around the Constitutional Council (France), the Council of State (France), and the European Court of Justice. His major writings analyzed principles derived from landmark cases such as rulings by the Conseil d'État on public freedoms, jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights on procedural guarantees, and doctrine emerging from the Court of Justice of the European Union. He contributed to comparative studies juxtaposing the French ordonnance framework with precedents from the United Kingdom Supreme Court, the Federal Constitutional Court (Germany), and the Supreme Court of the United States.

On policy, Pasquier played a role in reform projects addressing administrative simplification and regulatory impact assessment, collaborating with experts from the OECD Regulatory Policy Division, the European Commission Directorate-General for Justice and Consumers, and the World Bank legal reform teams. He prepared reports for parliamentary commissions of the Assemblée nationale and served on advisory panels to the Conseil d'État concerning digital administration, data protection, and algorithmic decision-making, intersecting with frameworks like those of the European Data Protection Board and legislative initiatives from the European Parliament.

Recognition and awards

Pasquier received distinctions from French institutions and professional bodies recognizing his legal scholarship and public service. He was honored by the Ordre national du Mérite and received awards from the Société française pour le droit administratif for his contributions to administrative law. Academic recognition included prizes from the Académie des sciences morales et politiques and fellowships at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique and the European University Institute. He was invited to present keynote addresses at conferences organized by the International Association of Constitutional Law, the International Bar Association, and the International Institute of Administrative Sciences.

Personal life and legacy

Pasquier has maintained residence in Paris while engaging in comparative legal networks spanning Brussels, Strasbourg, and Geneva. Colleagues cite his influence on younger jurists who have taken posts at the Conseil d'État, the Cour de cassation, and the European Court of Human Rights as evidence of his mentorship legacy. His blend of doctrine and practical reform contributed to ongoing debates in French public law and in European administrative governance, informing subsequent reforms of administrative procedure and judicial review. He has been referenced in scholarly works alongside figures from the tradition of Maurice Hauriou, Georges Vedel, and contemporary commentators from the Institut de droit public.

Category:French jurists Category:École nationale d'administration alumni