Winter School - Constitutional Crisis and Cyber Security: Institutions, Rights, and Global Challenges
The Advanced Skills for Junior Scholars, focused on Constitutional Crisis and Cyber Security: Institutions, Rights, and Global Challenges aims to provide an interdisciplinary forum for reflection on the profound transformations affecting contemporary constitutional systems in the digital age.
In recent decades, the interplay between constitutional governance, technological transformation, and security imperatives has posed unprecedented challenges to democratic legal systems. Contemporary constitutional crises unfold in a context marked by cyber insecurity, digital interference, disinformation, and geopolitical tensions, testing the balance of powers, the protection of fundamental rights, and the legitimacy of public institutions. The digital domain thus emerges not only as a new field of conflict, but also as a constitutional frontier, raising crucial questions concerning sovereignty, accountability, and democratic integrity.
The programme seeks to engage junior scholars in a critical dialogue on the nexus between constitutional crisis and cyber security, integrating perspectives from constitutional law, comparative and international law, political theory, and security studies, with the aim of exploring how to reconcile national security, the rule of law, and democratic integrity in the current global context.
- The OSCE Human Dimension: 50 years after the Helsinki Final Act (H. E. Amb. Andrea Cascone Representative of Italy to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE))
- Human Rights and States of Emergency in Emergency in International Law (Prof. Bernardo Mageste)
- Constitutionalism and Secularism in the Western Balkans from Historical and Comparative Perspective (Prof. Marko Bozic)
- Housing markets & social housing: regulatory responses in the age of digital sovereignty (Prof. Lejla Ramic)
- AI Liability and the struggle to regulate (Prof. Nasir Muftic)




