about the project
Accuriacy is an easy-to-use search engine covering the case law of both the
Court of Justice of the European Union
and of the
European Court of Human Rights.
Accuriacy is and will remain entirely free — we guarantee your money back if you’re not satisfied.
Accuriacy does not ask you to register — in fact, you cannot register.
Accuriacy does not keep your personal data — we do not keep any data whatsoever (yes, we do cover
the caselaw on the GDPR).
Enjoy searching!
about the creator
| Alexandre Saydé (LL.M. Harvard, Ph.D. EUI)
has entirely coded this website and its search engine, using:
Alexandre is also a Brussels-registered lawyer specialised in European law.
He currently works as a référendaire at the Court of Justice of the European Union.
about the name
Accuriacy is the contraction of accuracy and curia, the latin name for “court”.
It symbolises our core-value (accuracy) and our core-object (documents published by courts).
about the coverage
Accuriacy covers the caselaw of both the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) and the European Union courts:
the Court of Justice, the General Court and the Civil Servant Tribunal (abolished in 2016).
In more detail, Accuriacy seeks to cover:
- all judgments rendered by the ECHR in French [11,542] and English [18,701],
- all documents (Judgment, AG Opinion, Order, Opinion, View, Decision of Review, Ruling) published by EU courts in French [47,717] and English [36,863],
- in total, [114,823] documents, of which [59,259] in French and [55,564] in English.
Please note that some documents may be missing due to download difficulties encountered on the official websites of the European Court of Human Rights and of the Court of Justice of the European Union. Despite our best efforts, errors in metadata or text may also be present on Accuriacy when such errors are also present on the said official sites.
about the logo
Our logo is the product of
| Gianmarco’s unfailing artistry.
The three-bar shape and color tones are inspired by the three towers of the European Court of Justice (Luxembourg).
The curvatures suggest the letters
A and
I, alluding to the technology supporting Accuriacy.