Marko Turudić is an associate professor at the Chair of Administrative Law at the University of Zagreb Faculty of Law, where  since the academic year 2024/25, he has been the head of the Study Center for Public Administration and Public Finance (vice-dean).

In his scientific work, he deals with administrative procedures and disputes, with a particular interest in public procurement, concessions, regulatory agencies, and the impact of market competition on administrative procedures. His works have been published in many Croatian scientific journals, as well as in some of the best European scientific journals on public procurement and concessions, such as Public Procurement Law Review and European Procurement and Public Private Partnership Law Review, where he is the national correspondent for Croatia. He is the author of the university textbook “Public Procurement Law” (Narodne novine 2017, second edition 2025), a book on EU cohesion policy (Narodne novine 2024), Commentary on the Public Procurement Act, and one of the contributors of the Commentary on the Public Procurement Directive 2014/24 (Edward Elgar 2021). He is a columnist for the IUS INFO portal, author of over 100 scientific and professional papers and four books, and runs the blog upravnopravo.blog where he regularly writes about topics in administrative law. His professional and scientific works, blogs, and books have been cited in numerous Croatian administrative acts and court rulings, as well as before the Court of Justice of the European Union.

In addition to general administrative law subjects, he is the holder of the subject “Public Procurement” at the graduate study of the Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb, which he introduced into the curriculum. He is also the head of the lifelong learning program in public procurement law and has successfully conducted dozens of education programs. He teaches at postgraduate studies and has mentored over 100 graduate and final papers, several final papers at specialist graduate studies, as well as two doctoral dissertations in public procurement law.

He is an invited lecturer at numerous domestic and international conferences on administrative law and public procurement law.