Marco  Provvidera

Marco Provvidera

Marco R. Provvidera practices law in New York City. He holds an LL.M Master’s Degree earned at New York University School of Law and a post-graduate Diploma in National Security Law earned at the University of Virginia School of Law. A member of the New York Bar, he is also admitted before the federal Southern District of New York, and the Court of Appeal for the Federal Circuit, Washington DC.

His private practice focuses on corporate and comparative law of privacy. His academic research and teaching focuses on international law of armed conflict, US national security, counter-terrorism, and the law of intelligence.

Marco is a candidate for the 2020 Eisenhower Fellowship at the NATO Defense College. He is currently Vice-Chair of the Committee on National Security of ABA Section of International Law, a member of the Financial Intelligence and Information Sharing Working Group of the American Security Project, and of the Legal Experts Board of the “Journal of Digital Investigations”.

As a visiting professor at the Center for Studies on Geopolitics and International Relations of Sapienza University of Rome, Marco recently lectured on the U.S. approach to countering finance of terrorism and illicit activities at the Winter School jointly offered by Sapienza University of Rome and Middlebury Institute of International Studies of Monterey, CA.

Marco, during his “in-residence-visiting” at the University of South Alabama Mitchell Business School (March, 2019), lectured on countering terrorism financing, the U.S. national security legal paradigm, and the novel implications of today’s “multi-domain”, hybrid warfare for the law of armed conflict.

Interviews with Marco Provvidera»See allInterviews RSS Feed

Marco Provvidera joins Jim Blasingame to discuss the emerging debate about what should be done about encroachment of privacy, and whether the solution is with Big Tech or government regulation.
Marco Provvidera joins Jim Blasingame to discuss the difference between how Big Tech companies and the government view our privacy, and why the difference could become dangerous.
Marco Provvidera joins Jim Blasingame to discuss the evolution of our privacy expectations since the advent of the Internet, and where privacy erosion is coming from.