
Results-driven empathy-fueled Lawyer determined to serve in the complex arena of human rights law.
I examined the political and social issues linked to the major global challenges faced by the humanitarian sector focusing on some specific areas such as Latin America and Middle East. I carried out critical analyses of practices and policies of humanitarian responses, especially in prominent sectors such as: global health, migration, management in humanitarian interventions; advocacy and communication; humanitarian negotiation, conflict resolution practices, scientific and cultural diplomacy in an intercultural context.
I concluded the course with a thesis on "JUDICIAL PROTECTION OF THE RULE OF DEMOCRATIC LAW AND DEMOCRACY CRISIS" where I explored the disruptive worldwide wave of anti-democracy we are witnessing as well as the crisis of democratic institutions through the lens of the judicial mechanisms and the operating conditions of the judiciary.
I graduated with 110 Cum Laude with a thesis on "Technology and tradition in the right to a lawful treatment of the detainee" where I carried out an excursus of the national legislation regarding penitentiary law and its evolution over time by focusing, in particular, on the so-called "detainees' controversial rights" such as the right to use technology inside detention centres.
score: 211
I graduated with a final grade of 98/100 with a thesis designed to deepen the thought of the italian jurist Gustavo Zagrebelsky about the interrelation between the Italian Constitution and Classicism intended as the cultural principles devised by the ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome that ultimately converged in the fundamental principles of the Italian Constitution.
I’m an avid reader. I love spending my free time reading books on various topics, especially poetry. Some would say I’m an amateur poetry writer myself. I enjoy playing chess and attending cultural events of all sorts and sometimes fancy myself a fine art connoisseur.