Didier TRUCHET - Professor (université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas)
Marie-Laure MOQUET-ANGER - Professor (université Rennes)
Stéphane HENNETTE-VAUCHEZ - Professor (université Paris Ouest)
Emmanuel DECAUX - Professor (université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas)
Martine LOMBARD - Professor (université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas)
The interest of a study about death comes from the contradictions that affect it. Only the living can create laws and regulations: by definition, death in public law is the law of the living. Death, as managed by public law, is a prism which reveals the construction of the State but also uncovers gaps and weaknesses in the law to deal with the mystery of human condition. The law swings back and forth between a conception of death seen as nothingness and individual and collective beliefs giving nevertheless value to the person and human life before and beyond death. While freeing itself from religion, the law has not completely lost any "sacred" dimension and the State must face these individual and collective beliefs about death. In less than a century, there has been a shift from do not kill to an obligation to protect life; this shift is now widely integrated in modern law. Scientific and medical advances allow a new control of human life and also change the sovereign expression of the state. Public law is now in charge of a life protection duty and starts to integrate rules about the biological condition of human people itself.