fbpx Romeo Bassoli's smiling lesson | Science in the net

Romeo Bassoli's smiling lesson

Read time: 2 mins

romeo bassoli

Dear Romeo, we came a long way, together. It would have not been the same without you, for sure, not without your humanity, your unique humour and love for punning, your passion for science and your journalistic talent that endured even in telling with courage and tact, on Facebook, about the disease that eventually took you away.

Scientific journalism in Italy owes a lot to Romeo Bassoli (1954-2013). Taken to Rome by Luigi Berlinguer in the Seventies - from his home-town Sesto San Giovanni - for writing about Education on L’Unita’, Romeo in 1987 invented from scratch the communist party newspaper’s mythical science page, which lasted for 12 years until 1999, when “new trends” stole its place.       

Partner of Zadig, where he launched brilliant initiatives as “Lanci”, Romeo Bassoli became then in 2008 director of the press office for the National Institute of Nuclear Physics. And it was immediately clear in terms of impact and vivid communication of the last extraordinary discoveries of particle physics.

He taught scientific communication to generations of youngsters. His last work was a book written with Luciano Maiani, “A caccia del Bosone di Higgs” (Hunting the Higgs Boson). Just looking at the titles of his previous books, then, his spirit emerges clearly: from “October moon. How the Sputnik changed the world” (Luna di ottobre. Come lo Sputnik cambio’ il mondo, with Federico Ungaro in 2007), to “Let’s take the kids. Travelling with our children without ruining our vacation” (Portiamo anche i bambini. Viaggiare con i figli senza rovinarsi le vacanze, 1997). From “The ox behind the hedge. Animal well-being in the human/nature balance” (Il bue oltre la siepe. Il benessere animale nell’equilibrio uomo/natura, 1996), to “The new teenagers. X-ray of a forgotten age” (I nuovi adolescenti. Radiografia di un’eta’ dimenticata, with Eva Benelli, 1995), to finally get to his first book, “Fairy Tales from Asturias” (Fiabe delle Asturie, 1989). When calling him, he often used to answer with the legendary “We are swimming vigorously”. And this is how we like to imagine him now – close to his partner Eva Benelli and his children – going away, with his nice beard and his smile.

Here is how he talked about his disease on Janus.


Scienza in rete è un giornale senza pubblicità e aperto a tutti per garantire l’indipendenza dell’informazione e il diritto universale alla cittadinanza scientifica. Contribuisci a dar voce alla ricerca sostenendo Scienza in rete. In questo modo, potrai entrare a far parte della nostra comunità e condividere il nostro percorso. Clicca sul pulsante e scegli liberamente quanto donare! Anche una piccola somma è importante. Se vuoi fare una donazione ricorrente, ci consenti di programmare meglio il nostro lavoro e resti comunque libero di interromperla quando credi.


prossimo articolo

Responsibility for the damages caused by climate change and attribution science

Disputes and legal actions concerning climate change are on the rise, as are those aimed at obtaining compensation for damages caused by specific atmospheric events from parties believed to be responsible. This is a result of the findings of attribution science, a discipline aimed at clarifying the causal relationship between the occurrence of extreme weather events and climate change.

Image credits: Markus Spiske on Unsplash

In an article from ten years ago, addressing the issue of climate litigations, the legal disputes concerning climate change, the author noted that most of them were brought against governments to introduce limits or controls on greenhouse gas emitting activities or against companies involved in their production (especially oil multinationals) to comply with existing regulations.