Renato Ibrido is Associate Professor in Comparative Public Law in the Department of Legal Sciences of the University of Florence.
In particular, in the University of Florence he teaches “Comparative and European constitutional Law”, “Electoral and Parliamentary Law” and “Comparative constitutional justice”.
He achieved the National Scientific Qualification as Full Professor for the Disciplinary Field of Comparative law (12/E2). Moreover, he achieved the National Scientific Qualification as Associate Professor for the disciplinary field of Constitutional Law (12/C1) and Economics, financial and agri-food markets law and regulation, navigation and air law (12/E3).
Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Public Law at LUISS Guido Carli University of Rome (2014-2018). Junior (2018-2020) and tenure track (2020-2023) Assistant Professor in the University of Florence.
PhD in Comparative Public Law at the University of Siena (2012).
His monograph on “L’interpretazione del diritto parlamentare” (Milano, FrancoAngeli, 2015) won:
- the IX edition of the Annual Prize Sergio Panunzio for young constitutional law scholars organized by the Italian Association of the Constitutional Law Scholar
- the III edition of the Franco Angeli – Collana "Studi di diritto pubblico" Annual Prize for the best book proposal in the field of Public Law
- the X edition of the Ettore Gallo Annual Prize.
Author of books about "L'Unione bancaria europea. Profili costituzionali" (Torino, Giappichelli, 2017) and “Forma di governo parlamentare ed equilibrio di potenza nel quadro della società internazionale. Problemi comparatistici” (Milano, Wolters Kluwer, 2020).
He was Visiting Professor at the Complutense University of Madrid.
Principal investigator of the project “Representative assemblies and technological innovation after the pandemics” (LEGITECH).
He was Academic Coordinator of the Joint Master Erasmus+ in "Parliamentary procedures and legislative drafting" (EUPADRA). Member of the editorial board of "Il Filangieri" and “Osservatorio sulle fonti”.
Member of the "Centro studi sul Parlamento" (CESP).
His main research interests are focused on forms of government, parliamentary procedures, constitution and foreign policy, central banks, European economic governance and legal interpretation.