FAQ Other topics

Here we will answer any questions you may have that do not fit into the previous categories.

Does the FLD have a research center?

The C3RD is the Research Centre on the Relations between Risk and Law of the Faculty of Law of the Université Catholique de Lille.
Created in 2006, it brings together nearly 40 researchers who coordinate their research activities in their fields of specialisation and practice.

The C3RD is therefore both multidisciplinary (public law, private law, international law, history of law, political science, economics) and transversal (human rights, sustainable development, business, new technologies, health, religion, etc.). With the aim of being at the heart of societal issues, the C3RD structures its research in relation to current events and through contemporary themes. With this in mind, teaching and research chairs have been created: the “Childhood and Families” chair, the “Law and Ethics of Digital Health” chair, etc.

What does ECCE mean ?

The Faculty of Law has integrated a new discipline into its training offer with the creation of the European School of Critical Criminology (ECCE). Through a philosophical and humanistic approach, the ambition of this multidisciplinary department is to teach and focus its research activities on the cultural dimension, both anthropological and social, of the subject of criminological studies.

Can you give more information about the two campuses?

The Lille campus is in the heart of the city centre. The Faculty of Law is a member of the Université Catholique de Lille. Ranked second in the top 10 most beautiful French universities, “La Catho” is an institution recognised locally, nationally and internationally for the quality of its teaching, research and student services.
The Issy-les-Moulineaux campus is a modern and family-friendly campus. On a campus dedicated to legal sciences and located in the centre of Issy-les-Moulineaux, students benefit from a privileged living and study environment: a family atmosphere reigns thanks to its small classes which favour support.