Elena Bascone (born 1995) is an Italian author and political economist specializing in international sanctions and European technological competitiveness. She is Charlemagne Prize Fellow (2023âÂÂ2024) conducting research on the development of European industry consortiums in emerging sectors such as the metaverse, space, and aviation.
Bascone is originally from Venice and pursued bachelorâÂÂs degree focusing in international relations and human rights from the University of Padova. In 2025, Bascone participated in the centenary celebrations of the Faculty of Political Science at the University of Padova alongside notable Italian political and academic figures including Lorenzo Fontana, Renato Brunetta and Daniele Franco.
She later completed a Master of International Affairs at the Hertie School in Berlin, during the presidency of Henrik Enderlein. Bascone graduated remotely in 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, returning to Northern Italy on repatriation flights organized by then Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio.
Her masterâÂÂs thesis, developed a model on the effectiveness of international sanctions with a case study on RussiaâÂÂs re-entry into the Council of Europe. She has also been involved with the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (IHEID) in Geneva, which hosts the Geneva International Sanctions Network (GISN).
Bascone was awarded the Charlemagne Prize Fellowship for 2023âÂÂ2024, where she is mentored by Wolfgang Ischinger who followed her at the Hertie School. The title of her project is âÂÂHow can we make the global race to the metaverse European-like? Developing a business and policy model to build European industry consortiumsâ and she has been a Visiting Fellow at CEPS during her research year.
In November 2025 it is announced her literary debut with Oscar Mondadori: "Italian dream". The book genre is described as a mix between Bildungsroman, love story and cultural critique and welcomed by intellectuals as an "hymn to resilience and hope".
Bascone has expressed a strong interest in mathematics, statistics, and programming, according to her Hertie School and Charlemagne profiles.