Decision on higher education tuition fees in public universities (Constitutional Court, France, 2019)

By Eleanor , 10 June 2021

In 2019, the French Constitutional Court (Conseil Constitutionnel) was seized by student unions and associations regarding public higher education tuition fees concerning international students from outside of the European Union. The plaintiffs argued that under paragraph 13 of the preamble of the French constitution, public higher education should be equally accessible to all and free. The Constitutional Court found that modest tuition fees in public higher education, where appropriate and depending on the financial capacity of students, do not go against the principle of equal access to education and the principle of free higher education. The right to education should ensure that access to higher education is financially possible for every student. Thus, limited tuition fees can be set by legislators under the control of the judicial system. Therefore, the Court states that the right to education of international students to access French public higher education system was not violated.

Year of publication
2021
Author(s)
Right to Education Initiative and Sciences Po Law School Clinic
Publisher(s)
Right to Education Initiative
Source
rte-publication
Resource type
Country
Key resource
No