Public Law

A.Y. 2024/2025
9
Max ECTS
60
Overall hours
SSD
IUS/09
Language
Italian
Learning objectives
The course aims to teach students the fundamentals of Italian public law (sources of law, the general workings of State, the constitutional and administrative organisation of the Republic of Italy, the legal system and citizens' rights) and to build on the core legal education offered in all degree programme curricula.
In addition to textbook study, classroom learning is central (although not mandatory) to achieving these learning objectives, as lessons offer students an essential opportunity to learn the correct methodological approach to study and the appropriate legal terminology.
Expected learning outcomes
Upon completing the course, students will have a full understanding of the core public law institutions and will be able to discuss them in a strictly logical manner using accurate legal terminology. Students will be able to seamlessly continue the legal studies prescribed in the various curricula of the degree programme and to independently and cognitively analyse the Italian constitutional system (including its relationships with supranational legislation and current issues relating to political institutions).
Single course

This course can be attended as a single course.

Course syllabus and organization

A-K

Lesson period
First trimester
Course syllabus
As an indication, the course examines: the foundations of a legal order and the principles of legal reasoning; the forms of State; the international law (overall view) and the relationships between the international legal order and domestic legal order; the European integration's process and the European legal order (overall view); the system of the sources of law; the forms of government; the principles of Italian constitutional order; the Italian constitutional history; the fundamental rights; the referendum and the institutions of representative democracy; the Italian Legislative Power; the Italian President of the Republic; the Italian Executive Power; the Italian regional and local system of government; the Italian system of Public Administration; the Italian Judiciary; the Italian judicial review of legislation and Constitutional Court.
Prerequisites for admission
As a first-year, first trimester course, there are no specific prerequisites for taking the exam other than those required for admission to the degree course.
Teaching methods
Fontal lessons (academic lectures taught in class with slides support) in the Italian language.
Attending lessons is strongly recommended.
No recording or web-streaming of the lessons is available.
Teaching Resources
Attending students study for the exam on the notes taken by themselves during class and on the book: P. Bilancia - E. De Marco (editors), L'Ordinamento della Repubblica. Le Istituzioni e la Società, Wolters Kluver-Cedam (publisher), 4d edition, 2021, chapter V, sections III and VII of chapter IX and chapter X excluded.
Assessment methods and Criteria
The examination is exclusively in oral form and in the Italian language (without exceptions). It consists of three questions, usually, each of which relates to any of the topics of the program, aimed at ascertaining the student's actual achievement of the expected learning outcomes of the course. The result, expressed in thirtieths, takes into account the level of knowledge and mastery of the matter, and the ability to expose it in a logical-systematic method, with properties of technical-legal language and correctness of legal references (possibly even framing new phenomena or case studies).
Students are called to the exam according to the order in which they register for the exam.
During the exam, the student is not allowed to use texts or notes of any kind (included slides, on-line materials, or electronic files of any type).
IUS/09 - PUBLIC LAW - University credits: 9
Lessons: 60 hours
Shifts:
Turno
Professor: Pizzetti Federico Gustavo

L-Z

Responsible
Lesson period
First trimester
Course syllabus
As an indication, the course examines: the foundations of a legal order and the principles of legal reasoning; the forms of State; the international law (overall view) and the relationships between the international legal order and domestic legal order; the European integration's process and the European legal order (overall view); the system of the sources of law; the forms of government; the principles of Italian constitutional order; the Italian constitutional history; the fundamental rights; the referendum and the institutions of representative democracy; the Italian Legislative Power; the Italian President of the Republic; the Italian Executive Power; the Italian regional and local system of government; the Italian system of Public Administration; the Italian Judiciary; the Italian judicial review of legislation and Constitutional Court.
Prerequisites for admission
None.
Teaching methods
The teaching will take place through lectures, using videos and digital materials, facilitating questions and reflections for further insights. The internet site is: www.lifeimprisonment.eu
Teaching Resources
First and second units:
- notes from lessons;
- manual: L'ordinamento della Repubblica. Le Istituzioni e la Società, (a cura di) P. Bilancia e E. De Marco, Cedam, Padova, IV ed., 2021.
Third units:
- notes from lessons;
- manual: L'ordinamento della Repubblica. Le Istituzioni e la Società, (a cura di) P. Bilancia e E. De Marco, III edizione, Cedam, Padova, IV ed., 2021;
- book: P. Pinto de Albuquerque, I diritti umani in una prospettiva europea. Opinioni concorrenti e dissenzienti (2011-2015), a cura e con un saggio di Davide Galliani, prefazione di P. Bilancia, Giappichelli, Torino, 2016 (the Introduction, pages 5-46, and at least 10 separate opinions chosen by the student).
- book: C. Danusso, E. Dolcini, D. Galliani, F. Palazzo, A. Pugiotto, M. Ruotolo, Ergastolo e diritto alla speranza. Forme e criticità del "fine pena mai", prefazione di M. Cartabia, Giappichelli, Torino, 2024 (the Introduction, pages XVII-LXXIII, and at least two papers for each section of the First Part and at least two judgments of the Second Part).
Assessment methods and Criteria
The exam takes place in an oral test, usually three questions, each on a topic of a teaching unit, aimed at ascertaining the full knowledge of the subject and the ability to expose it with logical-systematic method and technical-legal language properties ( also to frame and describe new phenomena or case studies). In order to take the exam, therefore, the student must set up the study using a systematic interpretation of the institutes addressed during the course. The exam, in fact, requires the student to be able to handle all the subject, demonstrating that he or she has the ability to navigate public law topics.
IUS/09 - PUBLIC LAW - University credits: 9
Lessons: 60 hours
Professor: Galliani Davide
Shifts:
Turno
Professor: Galliani Davide
Professor(s)
Reception:
Wednesday, h. 3:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
At distance on MS Teams via direct call