Global Fellow Marco Dell'Erba

Marco Dell'Erba

Global Research Fellow
mde285@nyu.edu

Marco Dell’Erba is Professor of Corporate & Financial Law at the University of Zurich, where he is also a member of the Blockchain Center and the Digital Society Initiative. He is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Corporate Governance & Finance at New York University School of Law, a Visiting Senior Fellow in the Program of Corporate Governance at Harvard Law School, and a Global Fellow at the Wilson Center in the Science and Technology Innovation Program.

Marco Dell’Erba is the author of Technology in Financial Markets: Complex Change and Disruption (OUP, 2024) His scholarship has appeared in leading American and European journals, and featured on the Harvard Forum on Corporate Governance, Columbia Law School Blue Sky Blog, the Oxford Business Law Blog.

His current research projects focus on digital finance (digital communities, finance and the metaverse) and sustainability in corporate law and financial regulation.

He previously held research and visiting positions at multiple institutions, including New York University, where he was Global Fellow affiliated with NYU’s Institute for Corporate Governance and Finance and the Center for Financial Institutions; at the Goethe University Frankfurt (LawFin Center); at the Groningen Center for Financial European Financial Services (University of Groningen, Netherlands); at the Financial Regulation Laboratory of Excellence (University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, Paris); the National University of Singapore (Singapore); and at the London School of Economics (UK) as a Research Assistant in the Department of law during his PhD. He practiced law in the departments of Banking & Finance and Litigation & Dispute Resolutions at Clifford Chance LLP (Rome) and as an independent consultant (Paris).

Marco Dell’Erba holds a JD summa cum laude from the University of Rome La Sapienza. He obtained his LL.M in Corporation Law at the New York University School of Law, where he was Global Hauser Scholar and served as Graduate Editor in the NYU Journal of Law & Business. He holds a PhD in private law and financial regulation from the University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne and a PhD in corporate and securities law from the University of Rome Tor Vergata.

His research interests include Financial Law & Banking Law, Corporate Law, Law & Technology.

Center Affiliation: Institute for Corporate Governance & Finance
Research Project: The Law of the Metaverse. Finance as a Constitution?