I am a Postdoctoral Researcher and Lecturer in the Methodology and Epistemology of Political Theory at the University of Geneva, where I work on my SNF Project "ISTAP - Interstate Trust Over Asylum Policies"
I have been (2020-2024) a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Bergen and the Executive Scientific Coordinator of the H2020 project "PROTECT" (2020-2023).
Before moving to Norway, I had short seminar and teaching assistant appointments at the University of Bergamo, chair of Social Philosophy, and I am still a registered Subject Expert ("Cultore della materia") there.
I have also given courses in Philosophical Anthropology and Philosophical Ethics at the Theological Institute Laurentianum in MIlan.
I hold a PhD (2018) from the University of Milan, Doctoral School in Philosophy and Human Sciences, XXX Cycle, which I completed by discussing a thesis on The Migrant Crisis and Philosophy of Migration: Reality, Realism, Ethics.
I spent one year of my doctorate at the InCite - Institute of Citizenship Studies of the University of Geneva.
Other formative courses I have been selected to attend at doctoral level include the Amsterdam Autumn School in Ethics of Migration (OZSW) and the Zurich LERU Summer School in Citizen Science.
My Bachelor's and Master's Degrees are both from the University of Pavia, with theses in Aesthetics and Political Theory respectively. During my Master's I went on exchange for a semester to Northern Arizona University.
While in Pavia I was also a student at IUSS - University School of Advanced Studies, where I graduated in the Human Sciences course.
My field of specialization is Ethics of Migration, and Migration and Political Theory more broadly.
My professional and academic competencies extend to these domains: principally philosophy (especially political, moral, bioethics, and aesthetics), and secondarily history and human sciences (sociology, psychology, pedagogy).
I am enrolled in the Philosophy and Human Sciences (A18) and Philosophy and History (A19) high-school teaching rankings of the Italian Ministry of Education, and I occasionally worked as a high-school teacher in short-terms appointments.
Supervisors: Sante Maletta, Marco Geuna, Matteo Gianni, Emanuela Ceva, Ian Carter, Sergio Filippo Magni, Valentina Bambini, Luisa Bonesio, and Massimo Canepa
Address: Department of Comparative Politics, Christies Gate 15, 5007 Bergen
I have been (2020-2024) a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Bergen and the Executive Scientific Coordinator of the H2020 project "PROTECT" (2020-2023).
Before moving to Norway, I had short seminar and teaching assistant appointments at the University of Bergamo, chair of Social Philosophy, and I am still a registered Subject Expert ("Cultore della materia") there.
I have also given courses in Philosophical Anthropology and Philosophical Ethics at the Theological Institute Laurentianum in MIlan.
I hold a PhD (2018) from the University of Milan, Doctoral School in Philosophy and Human Sciences, XXX Cycle, which I completed by discussing a thesis on The Migrant Crisis and Philosophy of Migration: Reality, Realism, Ethics.
I spent one year of my doctorate at the InCite - Institute of Citizenship Studies of the University of Geneva.
Other formative courses I have been selected to attend at doctoral level include the Amsterdam Autumn School in Ethics of Migration (OZSW) and the Zurich LERU Summer School in Citizen Science.
My Bachelor's and Master's Degrees are both from the University of Pavia, with theses in Aesthetics and Political Theory respectively. During my Master's I went on exchange for a semester to Northern Arizona University.
While in Pavia I was also a student at IUSS - University School of Advanced Studies, where I graduated in the Human Sciences course.
My field of specialization is Ethics of Migration, and Migration and Political Theory more broadly.
My professional and academic competencies extend to these domains: principally philosophy (especially political, moral, bioethics, and aesthetics), and secondarily history and human sciences (sociology, psychology, pedagogy).
I am enrolled in the Philosophy and Human Sciences (A18) and Philosophy and History (A19) high-school teaching rankings of the Italian Ministry of Education, and I occasionally worked as a high-school teacher in short-terms appointments.
Supervisors: Sante Maletta, Marco Geuna, Matteo Gianni, Emanuela Ceva, Ian Carter, Sergio Filippo Magni, Valentina Bambini, Luisa Bonesio, and Massimo Canepa
Address: Department of Comparative Politics, Christies Gate 15, 5007 Bergen
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Books by Dario Mazzola
Firmly anchored in contemporary political issues, Freedom and Borders: A Theory of Citizenship for the Age of Globalization delves into the history and theory of citizenship to illustrate its meaning and function, and how its transformative powers have the capacity to overcome contemporary challenges.
Showcasing the dynamics between citizenship, rights, and the state, Dario Mazzola addresses several crucial issues in political theory, including the integration between national and global citizenship, as well as peace, equality, and freedom. Combining perspectives from mainstream Anglo-Analytic philosophy with other viewpoints, chapters connect sources from a variety of disciplines and philosophical schools to weigh in on the ongoing debate over the positive and negative aspects of globalization, as well as their implications for the newly emergent global citizen.
Offering the benefits of a systematic, philosophical encounter between cultures and scholarships which have yet to converge on this topic, Freedom and Borders: A Theory of Citizenship for the Age of Globalization presents a unique and original theory of citizenship, producing a provocative read for the expert and an impassioned introduction for the student with an interest in citizenship studies.
Papers by Dario Mazzola
Book Chapters by Dario Mazzola
1.1 Theorizing Citizenship
1.2 What This Book Is
1.3 What (and Whom) This Book Is For
1.4 What This Book Is Not
1.5 The Politics of Global Citizenship
2.2 The Right to Have Rights
2.3 Rightlessness as a Path Toward the Extension of Status
4.2 The Concept of Peace and Its Relation to Freedom
4.3 Peace, Freedom, and Equality
4.4 The Defenses of National Citizenship
Blog posts/policy briefs/short articles by Dario Mazzola
https://protectproject.w.uib.no/reigniting-the-migration-and-asylum-debate-comments-on-the-commissions-proposal/
https://www.rethinkingrefuge.org/articles/unpacking-the-new-eu-approach-to-asylum-and-migration
Firmly anchored in contemporary political issues, Freedom and Borders: A Theory of Citizenship for the Age of Globalization delves into the history and theory of citizenship to illustrate its meaning and function, and how its transformative powers have the capacity to overcome contemporary challenges.
Showcasing the dynamics between citizenship, rights, and the state, Dario Mazzola addresses several crucial issues in political theory, including the integration between national and global citizenship, as well as peace, equality, and freedom. Combining perspectives from mainstream Anglo-Analytic philosophy with other viewpoints, chapters connect sources from a variety of disciplines and philosophical schools to weigh in on the ongoing debate over the positive and negative aspects of globalization, as well as their implications for the newly emergent global citizen.
Offering the benefits of a systematic, philosophical encounter between cultures and scholarships which have yet to converge on this topic, Freedom and Borders: A Theory of Citizenship for the Age of Globalization presents a unique and original theory of citizenship, producing a provocative read for the expert and an impassioned introduction for the student with an interest in citizenship studies.
1.1 Theorizing Citizenship
1.2 What This Book Is
1.3 What (and Whom) This Book Is For
1.4 What This Book Is Not
1.5 The Politics of Global Citizenship
2.2 The Right to Have Rights
2.3 Rightlessness as a Path Toward the Extension of Status
4.2 The Concept of Peace and Its Relation to Freedom
4.3 Peace, Freedom, and Equality
4.4 The Defenses of National Citizenship
https://protectproject.w.uib.no/reigniting-the-migration-and-asylum-debate-comments-on-the-commissions-proposal/
https://www.rethinkingrefuge.org/articles/unpacking-the-new-eu-approach-to-asylum-and-migration
https://www.e-ir.info/2023/04/12/opinion-decolonization-is-decisive-in-the-confrontation-with-russia/