Research: The evolution of the right to privacy and new technologies: constitutional and comparative perspectives
Phd candidate in Public Law - curriculum “Constitutional Law and General Public Law” (XXVI cycle).
Graduated with honours in Law (University of Rome “La Sapienza”) with a final dissertation in Comparative Public Law on “The right to privacy in America: history and perspectives” (supervisor Prof. Alessandra di Martino). He was awarded a scholarship to attend a semester abroad at the Columbia Law School, where he focused mainly on the historical development of the right to privacy. His main research interests concern privacy law, private powers and the legal aspects of new technologies (e.g. AI). He assists the chair of Comparative Public Law (Prof. Alessandra di Martino). Before graduation, he worked in a leading Italian law firm, with focus in administrative law and, in 2021, he joined the Freshfields’s litigation department.