Lukasz Duleba is an Assistant Professor at Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań (AMU), where he obtained his PhD at the Department of Political Science and Journalism. Since November 2022, he has been an associate member of the ENS.
His research is situated at the intersection of contemporary political theory and digital governance. He focuses on algorithmic governance, with particular attention to the conceptual and normative challenges of legitimacy and accountability arising from the use of algorithmic and data-driven systems in public decision-making. His work examines how algorithmic infrastructures reshape established understandings of political power, responsibility, transparency, and democratic order.
He explores the implications of automation and computational decision-making for theories of legitimacy, the reconfiguration of accountability mechanisms, and the transformation of governance practices. He is especially concerned with the tensions between configurations of power, claims to legitimacy, and principles of equality, alongside the broader consequences of digitalisation for the meaning of “the political”.
His earlier work engaged with the history of political thought and methodological disputes in political theory, perspectives that continue to inform his analysis of emerging forms of governance.
His research has been funded by the National Science Centre and the National Programme for the Development of Humanities.