
ABOUT
I am a researcher with expertise in human rights law and public law and a focus on the implications of digital technologies. I am currently a Doctoral Researcher in Law at the University of Oxford, as a Clarendon Scholar and Resident at the Bonavero Institute of Human Rights. Until 2025, I was the Director of the Digital Welfare State and Human Rights Project at the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at New York University School of Law, and a Visiting Fellow at Lund University. From 2022-2024, I was an Adjunct Professor at New York University School of Law.
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My research focuses on governments’ introduction of digital technologies into public services, examining the public law and human rights implications of governments' ‘digital transformation’ initiatives. I have led research projects into the digital transformation of government across the Global North and Global South, and have collaborated with civil society partners around the world to produce reports, policy contributions, and host workshops and events. I ran and co-hosted a 15-episode webinar series on digital government and human rights.
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I have taught lectures and seminars on digital technologies and human rights at New York University School of Law, Columbia University (United States), the University of McGill (Canada), the University of Melbourne (Australia), the University of St Gallen (Switzerland), and Lund University (Sweden).
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My work has been published in journals such as the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, the Journal of Human Rights Practice and Public Law. I have published reports which have been cited by UN agencies, and my work has been covered in BBC News, The Observer, WIRED, and Reuters. I have presented in the House of Lords, and have contributed expertise to policy processes such as the U.S. 'AI Bill of Rights' Initiative.
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​I hold a First Class Law degree from the University of Oxford, an LL.M. from the London School of Economics, and an LL.M. from New York University, for which I was awarded the David Moses Memorial Prize for the member of the LL.M. class with the highest academic average and the Jerome Lipper Prize for Distinction in International Legal Studies.
