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The University of Trieste Graduation Day returned to the heart of the city to celebrate research, knowledge and new generations.

On Thursday 16 July, Piazza Verdi hosted the proclamation ceremony for the PhD graduates of the 38th cycle, which concluded with the distinctive and traditional mortarboard toss. Included in the Trieste Estate programme, the event transformed one of the most significant rituals of academic life into a public occasion for bringing the University and the city community together.

Following its debut last year, Graduation Day in the city has confirmed itself as an event through which UniTS shares with the local community the value of doctoral education and the contribution of research to the cultural, scientific, social and economic development of society.

Rector Donata Vianelli’s first Graduation Day

For Rector Donata Vianelli, this was the first Graduation Day since taking office.

“This year’s ceremony was the first I experienced as Rector of the University of Trieste and represented the consolidation of a new tradition for the University and the city. PhD graduates stand at the highest level of university education and mark the entry of new generations into the research community. Celebrating this milestone in Piazza Verdi means bringing knowledge beyond the places where it is produced and sharing it with society, because science is not only the advancement of knowledge: it is responsibility, confidence in the future and the ability to contribute to the common good.”

Graduation Day 2026 in numbers

The 2026 edition confirmed the growth of the University of Trieste’s PhD programmes. The 187 new PhD graduates proclaimed in Piazza Verdi represent a new record number for the University.

As Francesco Longo, UniTS professor and Rector’s Delegate for PhD Programmes, pointed out, “this figure is also linked to the impact of scholarships funded by the PNRR, Italy’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan: the 38th cycle is in fact the first to reach proclamation after fully including the scholarships launched in the 2022/2023 academic year, alongside the University of Trieste’s decision to continue investing its own resources in doctoral education.”

The 2026 class of new PhD graduates is made up of 89 women, accounting for 47.6%, and 98 men, accounting for 52.4%. The international component represents 14.4% of the total, with PhD graduates from 14 countries: Austria, Brazil, China, Costa Rica, Croatia, Ethiopia, the Philippines, France, India, Iran, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Rwanda and Tunisia. Overall, including Italy, 15 nationalities are represented, confirming a doctoral community open to Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas.

The 13 programmes: cross-disciplinary research

The 187 new PhD graduates come from 13 PhD programmes, reflecting the cross-disciplinary nature of research developed at the University of Trieste: from life sciences to physics, from chemistry to engineering, from artificial intelligence to nanotechnology, from sustainability to cognitive sciences, as well as history, architecture and territorial studies.

The programmes involved are: Environment and Life; Applied Data Science and Artificial Intelligence; Molecular Biomedicine; Chemistry; Circular Economy; Physics; Civil-Environmental Engineering and Architecture; Industrial and Information Engineering; Nanotechnology; Neuroscience and Cognitive Science; Reproduction and Developmental Sciences; Earth Science and Fluid Mechanics; History of Societies, Institutions and Thought. From the Middle Ages to the Contemporary Age.

Guests, institutions and partners

The special guest of the evening was Alberto Di Minin, Professor of Innovation Management at the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa, researcher and science communicator, who delivered the keynote lecture “The Future Needs Teachers and Mentors. Reflections on Research, Open Innovation and Human Responsibility”.

His lecture focused on the role of research in major technological and social transformations. Every age has imagined the future through the science and technology of its time, but revolutions are never produced by technologies alone. They require people capable of turning knowledge into possibility, building bridges between research, business and society, and giving innovation a human meaning.

Alongside science, music also played a central role in the evening, thanks to the performance by Pierpaolo Foti, violinist and composer.

The ceremony, hosted by journalist Marinella Chirico, was attended by Rector of the University of Trieste Donata Vianelli, Rector’s Delegate for PhD Programmes Francesco Longo, President of the Autonomous Region of Friuli Venezia Giulia Massimiliano Fedriga and Mayor of Trieste Roberto Dipiazza. Alberta Gervasio, Chief Executive Officer of Bluenergy Group S.P.A., and Luca Cristoforetti, General Manager of CiviBank, also took part on behalf of the partners supporting the initiative.

The mortarboard toss

The evening culminated in the proclamation of the new PhD graduates through the ritual of the mortarboard toss. The gesture, one of the most recognisable images of graduation ceremonies, is commonly traced back to the U.S. Naval Academy: in 1912, new officers threw their old cadet caps into the air. Since then, the mortarboard toss has become an immediate symbol of transition and collective celebration.

The event was also made possible thanks to the support of CiviBank and Bluenergy Group S.P.A., local partners of the initiative.

Trieste Estate is organised and promoted by the Municipality of Trieste, with the support of PromoTurismoFVG and in collaboration with the Trieste Convention & Visitors Bureau.