This work by Bekale Ambila Ange Loyd Yourick, a Gabonese lawyer, explores the need to legally protect the rights of learners in an education system in crisis. Through a multidisciplinary approach - law, sociology, pedagogy, philosophy - it highlights the challenges that students face: social inequalities, school violence, academic pressures, lack of professional support. The author proposes bold reforms such as the creation of collective training agreements, inspired by labor law, allowing learners and parents to participate in the development of study conditions; the establishment of a digital platform to monitor the employability of graduates; and the establishment of an Education Tribunal responsible for guaranteeing justice and equity in the school environment. A true plea for a balanced educational contract, the book defends the idea of education conceived as an emancipatory right and a lever for sustainable development, involving the State, schools, families and businesses.