Antonio Bultrini
Associate Professor
Department of Economics and Business Sciences
University of Firenze
Italy
Biography
Antonio Bultrini holds a law degree from the University of Rome. He is currently a full professor of international law and human rights at the University of Florence and a visiting professor at the Sant'Anna School in Pisa. He formerly served at the Council of Europe for over 13 years. In particular, he was a lawyer at the European Court of Human Rights and later co-secretary of the Committee of Experts of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. In this latter capacity he organized and carried out a number of fact-finding missions in several European countries with respect to the status and level of protection of linguistic minorities. Antonio Bultrini is the author of numerous publications in the field of human rights protection. He recently contributed to the European Union funded project FREE (Fundamental Rights Education in Europe). He acts as a legal advisor on human rights issues and has cooperated with a number of Italian and international NGOs as well as with the Council of Europe.
Research Interest
Economics and Business Sciences
Publications
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Antonio Bultrini (2014). Delayed Europe on human rights in Ukraine. AFRICANIALS, pp. 0-0, ISSN: 2280-9228
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Antonio Bultrini (2015). The right to access the Internet (and to protect yourself from the Internet) in the perspective of international human rights standards. In: Vittoria Barsotti (edited by). Freedom of Information, New Media and Rights Protection: Final Seminar on Rights: Final Ph.D. Seminar in Legal Sciences: Florence, June 9, 2014, pp. 9-45, Santarcangelo di Romagna (RN): Maggioli SpA, ISBN: 978-88-916-1250-2.
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Antonio Bultrini (2015). The (crucial) issue of the implementation of the Court's judgments (ECJ) in the perspective of the future of the conventional system. In: European Convention on Human Rights and the Italian Order, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, October 25, 2013, G. Giappichelli Editore, pp. 119-134, ISBN: 9788834856031