Alfons de Vreese


Alfons de Vreese was a Belgian magistrate, international judicial figure, and academic.
He began his judicial career at age 27, serving as a magistrate. A member of the Belgian Court of Cassation from 1961 to 1979, he eventually served as Section President. He belonged to the first generation of judges at the Benelux Court of Justice and contributed to establishing a fully recognised Dutch-language jurisprudence at Belgium's highest court.
De Vreese was one of the earliest law professors at the College of Europe in Bruges. From the institution's inaugural academic year he taught comparative law and public international law, later shifting to the emerging field of European Community law.
Internationally, he served as the first vice-president and subsequently President of the International Association of Judges from 1974 to 1976. During his presidency – after having personally traveled to New York in 1977 to advocate for it despite opposition – he successfully obtained consultative status for the IAJ at the United Nations Economic and Social Council.
Active in Flemish legal circles, he was a founding vice-chairman and later Honorary Vice-chairman of the and co-authored its 1966 manifesto on contemporary legal structures in the context of Flemish emancipation. From 1963 to 1979 he was an editorial board member of the journal Sociaal-Economische Wetgeving.
De Vreese was multilingual, traveler, and had interests in literature, the Italian Renaissance, and humanism.
De Vreese died in Ghent one day after his 85th birthday in 1994.