Carlo Masala | |
Birth Date: | 1968 3, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Cologne |
Fields: | political science |
Workplaces: | Bundeswehr University Munich |
Alma Mater: | University of Cologne |
Known For: | Podcast Sicherheitshalber |
Carlo Masala (born 27 March 1968) is professor for International Politics at the Bundeswehr University Munich, lecturer at the University of Munich,[1] [2] as well as lecturer and member of the senate of Munich School of Political Science.[3]
Masala was born in Cologne to an Austrian saleswoman and an Italian migrant worker, who initially worked in mining in Dortmund and later at Felten & Guilleaume in Cologne. His father, who died young, spoke very good German and met his future wife in Germany.
Masala grew up as an Italian in Germany in the Cologne district of Chorweiler, first in the Seeberg district and later in the Pesch district As a child, he also lived in Sardinia for a few years. In his childhood and youth, he experienced racist exclusion, for example by classmates and local police officers. He speaks fluent German and Italian and has knowledge of the Sardinian language.[4] [5]
From 1988 to 1992 Masala studied in Cologne and Bonn political sciences as well as German studies and Romance studies. After having finished his Master's degree, he started to work as researcher in Cologne. In 1996 he graduated at the Institute for Political Sciences and European Issues with a doctoral thesis on German-Italian Relations. In 2002 he was awarded his habilitation in political sciences.[6]
In 2003 Masala was temporarily employed as professor at the University of Munich, and in 2004 he started to work at the NATO Defence College in Rome. From 2006 to 2007 he used to be assistant director of research at the college.In July 2007 Masala took a chair of international politics at the Bundeswehr University Munich[7]
Masala considers himself a neorealist. His main research areas are theories of international politics, security politics as well as transatlantic relations.