Natascia Tosel is a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellow at the Department of Human Sciences of the University of Verona. She earned her PhD in Philosophy through a joint program between the University of Padua and Université Paris 8 Vincennes – Saint-Denis. She has been research fellow at the ICI Institute for Cultural Inquiry Berlin and the Centro Interdisciplinar de Estudos de Género (CIEG) at the University of Lisbon.
Her research focuses on the intersection of politics and law, with particular attention to the juridification of politics. She examines, on the one hand, how institutional languages shape social dynamics and, on the other, how social actors contribute to the production of these languages.
Currently, at the University of Verona, she is developing a research project offering a philosophical-political interpretation of Women’s Tribunals, exploring them as examples of collective actions aimed at rewriting or counter-narrating law and rights, particularly in relation to gender issues.
She is the author of Gabriel Tarde (Derive Approdi, 2022) and has published numerous essays and articles in academic journals, including Political Studies, Filosofia Politica, Politica e Società, Rivista Italiana di Filosofia Politica, and Soft Power.