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I received my Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Bologna, where I serve as Adjunct Professor of Microeconomics in the Department of Management and work as a teaching assistant in economics and econometrics courses.
My research lies at the intersection of applied and theoretical microeconomics, political economy, and behavioral economics, and examines how institutional incentives, informational environments, and behavioral frictions shape individual decision-making, selection processes, and the quality of institutions.
I combine formal theory with empirical analysis based on administrative microdata and experiments. My work focuses in particular on the role of information and crime perceptions in shaping voting behavior, selection into the public sector, and the economic determinants of corruption.
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