Patrizio Bianchi | |
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Minister of Education | |
In office 13 February 2021 – 22 October 2022 | |
Prime Minister | Mario Draghi |
Preceded by | Lucia Azzolina |
Succeeded by | Giuseppe Valditara |
Personal details | |
Born | (1952-05-28)28 May 1952 (age 72) Copparo, Italy |
Alma mater | University of Bologna |
Occupation | Economist, professor |
Patrizio Bianchi (born 28 May 1952) is an Italian economist and academic, current chairholder of theUNESCO Chair in Education, Growth and Equality. He served asminister of education in theDraghi Cabinet from 2021 to 2022.[1][2]
Patrizio Bianchi was born in the town ofCopparo, but he and his family moved to nearby city ofFerrara in his early life. After having graduated from theUniversity of Bologna in May 1976 with honours in political science under the guidance ofRomano Prodi andAlberto Quadrio Curzio, he specialised in economics and industrial politics at theLondon School of Economics withProfessor Basil Yamey. During this period he worked for theBritish Price Commission, participating in an investigative report into price controls in the cement sector, a subject about which he wrote his first essay, published in 1980 by Il Mulino.
In 1980 he became a researcher at the Faculty of Economics of theUniversity of Trento, and in the same year theMinister of BudgetBeniamino Andreatta nominated him National Planning Secretary for the restructuring of the automobile industry. In 1981 he became the supervising scientist for the Laboratory of Industrial Politics inNomisma.
In 1982 he moved to theUniversity of Bologna in the same role of university researcher where he won the Associate Professorship in 1986. In 1987 along withMartin Carnoy (Stanford University) and Manuel Castells (University of California, Berkeley), he was invited to the Chinese Ministry of Education to analyse the relationship between the university system and economic development, paying particular attention to the evaluation of research activities and to the training of PhD students. In 1989 he was named as visiting professor of Political Economics at theUniversity of Udine. In 1991 he returned to Bologna as visiting professor of Political Economics for the European community, with the mandate to launch the course of political science from the new seat of the University of Bologna atForli. Furthermore, at the University of Bologna in 1994 he became full professor of Economic Policy in the Department of Economic Sciences.
In 1992 he was named as director of the economic and industrial politics magazine L'industria (published by Il Mulino), a role that he would carry out until 2004.[3]
In 1997 he entered into the governing body of theIRI - Istituto per la Ricostruzione Industriale with the objective of finalising its privatisation by the year 2000.[4] From 1999 to 2000 he was named President ofSviluppo Italia (todayInvitalia) the national agency for the development of Southern Italy - created with the objective of valuing, rationalising and reuniting the previously operating 8 agencies of development.[5]
In 1997 he moved to theUniversity of Ferrara where in 1998 he founded the Faculty of Economics - now knows as Department of Economy and Management, recognised as department of excellence at national level.[6] Here he fulfilled his role as Full Professor of Economy and Industrial Politics as well as becoming the faculty director in 2000.[7] Professor Bianchi was elected Dean of the university with a 3-year term in 2004 and reelected to the same post until 2010. From 2004 to 2007 he was part of the managerial committee of theConference of Italian University Rectors. From 2006 to 2010 he was appointed as President of the Foundation of the Conference of Italian University Rectors and President of theUniversità telematica internazionale "UniNettuno" of Rome (owned by the consortium of Italian universities "Nettuno").[8] From 2003 to 2010 he acted as President of IMPAT - university consortium for the promotion of technology transfer and research spin-offs.
Since January 2020 he has been theUNESCO chairholder for Education, Growth and Equality at the University Of Ferrara.[9]
Over the years he has carried out research and consultancy activities for major national, European and international institutions, in particular in the area of industrial policy and development policies, publishing over 200 articles and 40 books in Italian, English and Spanish.
He served as Regional Minister for education, training, research, university, labour, work and European policies for development forEmilia-Romagna region for two terms from 2010 to February 2020 under the respective guidance of the presidentsVasco Errani andStefano Bonaccini.
From 2010 to 2012 he designed and implemented the reform of regional professional development, and from 2012 to 2014 he managed the reinitiation of teaching activities and the reconstruction of schools in the area affected by the2012 20–29 May Earthquake. Since 2017 he has directed the activities for the design and activation of the Big Data Technopole in Bologna, the new headquarters of theEuropean Center for Weather Forecasts (previously located inReading but transferred to Bologna followingBrexit) and of the European ScientificSupercomputing Center which houses Leonardo, the fourth fastest supercomputer in the world. In January 2019 he founded the International Foundation Big Data and Artificial Intelligence for Human Development (IFAB), where he was Scientific Director until 2021.[10][11] Since June 2018 he has also worked as vice-president of the Intermediterranean Commission (CIM) of the Conference of Peripheral and Maritime Regions (CPMR).[12]
His term as Regional Minister ended in February 2020. During his years as Councilor he was awarded the honor ofCommendatore al merito della Repubblica Italiana by thePresident of the Italian RepublicGiorgio Napolitano in 2010. On the 11 June 2015 as part of the closing meeting of the academic year of theAccademia dei Lincei he received the Lincei prize of the Ministry of Cultural Heritage for Political and Social Sciences from the President of the Italian Republic,Sergio Mattarella.[13][14]
In April of the same year he coordinated the ministerial task force, formed by the then Minister of EducationLucia Azzolina, to coordinate and manage the restart of the school year during theCOVID-19 pandemic.
On 12 February 2021 he was named byMario Draghi as Minister of Education in theDraghi government (anational unity government) and was sworn in the following day at theQuirinale in the presence of the President of the RepublicSergio Mattarella.The main objectives of his term was the return of face-to-face teaching for the 2021–2022 school year after the distance learning period due to the coronavirus pandemic and the implementation of the reforms envisaged by the National Recovery and Resilience Plan - PNRR (part ofNext Generation EU).[15]
As Education Secretary he chaired the G20 of education in Catania in 2021, held within the 2021 G20 summit under the Italian presidency. In September 2022 he also spoke in New York on the theme "Transforming Education for a Transforming World" at theseventy-seventh UN general assembly.[16]
His term ended on October 22, 2022, with the inauguration of theMeloni government.
After his term in government concluded, he returned to academic activity, being appointed professoremeritus at theUniversity of Ferrara. On 3 and 4 November 2022 he participated in the International Conference of UNESCO Chairs held in Paris on the occasion of the thirtieth anniversary of theUNESCO/UNITWIN Chairs Program.