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He is a PhD researcher (40th cycle) in Political and Social Sciences.
His doctoral research investigates political disinformation as a systemic phenomenon, examining how it is generated, disseminated, and reinforced through interactions among political elites, media, and citizens. Adopting a comparative perspective across European countries, with a particular focus on Italy, the project seeks to identify the mechanisms through which individual misperceptions are transformed into shared political “truths” capable of shaping public policy and democratic processes.
Beyond his primary research, his interests include populism, party organization, and the ways in which digitalization is reshaping internal structures and practices, as well as comparative political systems and party competition.