This article develops a civic, sociological, and philosophical analysis of institutional belonging within the modern Western university and the broader meritocratic architecture of contemporary Europe. Using the 16 May 2026 Modena attack as a diagnostic case study rather than an act of ideological instrumentalisation, the work investigates the structural fracture between constitutional promise, institutional inclusion rhetoric, and the lived reality of second generation citizens whose formal compliance with institutional requirements fails to produce genuine social integration. The article introduces the concept of the Broken Contract: the unwritten covenant through which universities promise that academic conformity, credential acquisition, and procedural compliance will produce recognition, mobility, legitimacy, and belonging within meritocratic society. The work argues that this promise increasingly functions as an epistemic and administrative fiction, particularly for individuals whose identity, surname, cultural register, neurodivergent cognition, or religious grammar remain outside the unmarked institutional template of legitimacy. The analysis develops several interconnected theoretical structures: institutional legibility, the grammar of belonging, epistemic invisibility, procedural inclusion, constitutional equality, and operational recognition. It argues that contemporary institutions increasingly confuse automated procedural processing with genuine human integration, producing populations who are formally recognised by the state while remaining socially unreadable to the systems governing labour, academia, healthcare, and civic belonging. A major strand of the work concerns the historical and civilisational architecture of Italian identity itself. Through an analysis of the Italian Constitution, the University of Naples Federico II, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, Arab Norman Sicily, the constitutional settlement of post fascist Italy, and the unresolved asymmetries between Northern and Southern Italy, the article argues that contemporary Italian identity operates through selective memory structures which partially erase the Mediterranean, Islamic, and plural inheritances embedded within the historical formation of the peninsula. The article further develops a critique of the modern university as an institution that has replaced genuine intellectual openness with reputational management, procedural abstraction, diversity aesthetics, and compliance theatre. It argues that the contemporary university increasingly functions not as a sanctuary for complex human cognition but as a credentialing machine optimised for administrative legibility. Within this structure, forms of cognition, identity, faith, and social existence that exceed bureaucratic compression become progressively invisible. The work is written simultaneously as constitutional defence, civic warning, and institutional diagnosis. It explicitly condemns violence and terrorism while insisting that democratic societies retain the moral obligation to analyse the structural architectures of invisibility, abandonment, and epistemic exclusion that precede social rupture. Subject Classification:Primary: Social and Political Philosophy, Philosophy of Education, Sociology of InstitutionsSecondary: Phenomenology, Constitutional Theory, Neurodiversity Studies, Philosophy of Religion, Political Sociology PhilPapers Indexing Fields:PhilPapers Category, Primary: Social and Political Philosophy, Philosophy of EducationPhilPapers Category, Secondary: Phenomenology, Philosophy of Social Science, Political Philosophy, Philosophy of ReligionPhilPapers Subcategory: Institutional Philosophy, Recognition Theory, Social Epistemology, Neurodivergent Phenomenology, Philosophy of Higher Education, Constitutional Identity, Identity and Belonging, Collective Memory, Secularism and Religion, Mediterranean Political ThoughtPhilPapers Keywords: institutional invisibility, epistemic exclusion, meritocratic failure, constitutional identity, second generation Italians, neurodivergent cognition, grammar of belonging, social legibility, institutional processing, bureaucratic abstraction, Western university critique, constitutional humanism, social recognition, cognitive illegibility, institutional sociology, procedural legitimacy, symbolic inclusion, Southern Italy, Arab Norman Sicily, collective identity, secularism, philosophy of belonging, phenomenology of exclusion, administrative compression, Equilibrium Ledger, Grassini Grimaldi Model, institutional asymmetry, epistemic governance, social conformityPhilArchive Subject Area: Social and Political Philosophy, Philosophy of Education, Phenomenology, Political Sociology Resource Type:Text, Journal Article Note:This article is part of the Equilibrium Ledger Research Programme™ ecosystem. Its central philosophical contribution is the distinction between procedural inclusion and existential belonging, developed through constitutional analysis, institutional sociology, neurodivergent cognition, second generation identity, and the philosophy of social recognition. The Italian version, Il Contratto Infranto, is uploaded alongside the English version as a parallel language edition of the same article.
Alessandro Grassini (Thu,) studied this question.